Description
Book SynopsisAustrian economists regard utilities as exceptional cases where regulation may be justified. The long term aim for a public utility should be to '...turn as much as possible of that industry into a private, competitive and unregulated industry'. In the short term this may mean a 'considerable role for regulation'. Price cap (RPI-X) regulation gives better efficiency incentives to companies than traditional US regulation and passes benefits on to consumers. UK style privatisation and regulation put competition at the forefront whereas '...traditional US regulation for the most part suppressed it.' In electricity, competition in generation has stimulated efficiency improvements but it is still not fully effective. Big generators still set wholesale prices most of the time and the government's 'stricter consents' policy for gas-fired plant hinders entry to generation: that policy is the 'most significant obstacle to a more competitive market'. Competition to supply industrial consumers ha