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The End of a Natural Monopoly: Deregulation and Competition in the Electric Power Industry (The Economics of Legal Relationships)
 
 

The End of a Natural Monopoly: Deregulation and Competition in the Electric Power Industry (The Economics of Legal Relationships) [Hardcover]

P.Z. Grossman (Editor), D.H. Cole (Editor)

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March 7, 2003 0762309954 978-0762309955 1
For a hundred years, scholars and government officials understood, or thought they did, the electric power industry. Electric power, based on a single, large service provider, connected by wires to all of its customers, was thought to be an industry that could only operate efficiently as a monopoly; indeed it was something called a "natural monopoly." Since it had to be a monopoly, with all the attendant inefficiencies and potential market abuses monopoly entails, government regulation was necessary.



These basic assumptions, which at times seemed to conflict with observed facts remained largely unquestioned for the better part of 75 years. Then, changing institutional and technological circumstances led economists to question the basis in fact of the theory of natural monopoly, and the regulatory system it entailed. Movement toward a deregulated electric power system began albeit in piece-meal fashion.



Indeed, the result has been a crazy quilt of deregulation and re-regulations, which often have resulted in more costs than benefits for society as a whole. In the most infamous case, California, the entire enterprise of regulatory change has been called into question. The process of de- or re-regulation in several other states has stopped because of fear of repeating California's mistakes.



This book addresses some of the fundamental issues underlying the debate over electric power regulation and deregulation. Only by understanding these questions and exploring a variety of possible answers to them can we hope to move the debate over the proper structure of the electric power industry. Undoubtedly, electric power deregulation will be a major legal and economic concern for years to come.


Editorial Reviews

Review

...Encouragingly this book starts by challenging the very notion that utilities, and especially the power industry, ever were natural monopolies. ...The optimistic tone of the conclusion takes comfort in examples from other utility services in the USA that show deregulation will always tend to proceed fitfully forward and the regulatory system will continue to evolve to take account of that new paradigm that natural monopoly no longer exists.
The Journal of Energy Literature, 2003

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
For a hundred years, economists, other scholars, and government officials understood, or thought they did, the electric power industry. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
stranded benefits, original regulatory contract, natural monopoly system, natural monopoly paradigm, regulatory covenant, genuine deregulation, retail electric markets, natural monopoly model, natural monopoly theory, continuation obligation, cumulative intervention, stranded costs, retail power markets, superior risk bearer, fear scenario, stranded investment, substituted contract, stranded cost recovery, competitive revenues, natural monopoly regulation, regulatory compact, public utility regulation, transmission segment, electric power market, franchise regulation
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Cambridge University Press, Public Utilities Fortnightly, World War, Supreme Court, Elsevier Science Ltd, Energy Law Journal, Federal Power Act, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Samuel Insull, State Utility Forecasting Group, Columbia Law Review, San Diego, University of Chicago Press, Competitive Retail Electric Markets, Lexington Books, Stranded Benefits Versus Stranded Costs, Assembly Bill, Cato Institute, Edison Electric Institute, Energy Information Administration, Federal Power Commission, General Electric, National Electric Light Association
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