posted on 2017-08-30, 11:01authored byEndre Bjorndal, Mette Bjorndal, Astrid Cullmann, Maria Nieswand
Revenue cap regulation is often combined with systematic benchmarking to reveal the managerial inefficiencies when regulating natural monopolies. One example is the European energy sector, where benchmarking is based on actual cost data, which are influenced by managerial inefficiency as well
as operational heterogeneity. This paper demonstrates how a conditional nonparametric method, which allows comparison of firms operating under heterogeneous technologies, can be used to estimate managerial inefficiency. A dataset of 123 distribution firms in Norway is used to show aggregate and
firm-specific effects of conditioning. We compare the models presently used by the Norwegian regulator to a suggested conditional model, thus providing a viable alternative to distinguish between managerial inefficiency and operational heterogeneity. The use of the conditional model in this regulatory
context leads, first, to a decrease in aggregate efficient costs and, second, to a reallocation effect that affects the relative profitability of firms and relative customer prices, thus providing a fairer basis for setting revenue caps.
Funding
This paper is produced as part of the project Municipal Infrastructure Companies against the Background of Energy Policy and Demographic Change (KOMIED) funded by the Leibniz Commission (SAW-2013-DIW-5)
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Economics
Published in
European Journal of Operational Research
Volume
265
Issue
2
Pages
710-722
Citation
BJORNDAL, E. ... et al, 2018. Finding the right yardstick: regulation of electricity networks under heterogeneous environments. European Journal of Operational Research, 265(2), pp.710-722.
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal European Journal of Operational Research and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2017.07.059