Do Households Respond to the Marginal or Average Price of Piped Water Services?

J. Cook, Daniel A. Brent
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Water utilities commonly use complex, nonlinear tariff structures to balance multiple tariff objectives. When these tariffs change, how will customers respond? Do customers respond to the marginal volumetric prices embedded in each block, or do they respond to an average price? Because empirical demand estimation relies heavily on the answer to this question, it has been discussed in the water, electricity, and tax literatures for over 50 years. To optimize water consumption in an economically rational way, consumers must have knowledge of the tariff structure and their consumption. The former is challenging because of nonlinear tariffs and inadequate tariff information provided on bills; the latter is challenging because consumption is observed only once and with a lag (at the end of the period of consumption). A large number of empirical studies show that, when asked, consumers have poor knowledge about tariff structures, marginal prices, and (often) their water consumption. Several studies since 2010 have used methods with cleaner causal identification, namely regression discontinuity approaches that exploit natural experiments across changes in kinks in the tariff structure, changes in utility service area borders, changes in billing periods, or a combination. Three studies found clear evidence that consumers respond to average volumetric price. Two studies found evidence that consumers react to marginal prices, although in both studies the change in price may have been especially salient. One study did not explicitly rule out an average price response. Only one study examined responsiveness to average total price, which includes the fixed, nonvolumetric component of the bill. There are five messages for water professionals. First, inattention to complex tariff schedules and marginal prices should not be confused with inattention to all prices: customers do react to changes in prices, and prices should remain an important tool for managing scarcity and increasing economic efficiency. Second, there is substantial evidence that most customers do not understand complex tariffs and likely do not respond to changes in marginal price. Third, most studies have failed to clearly distinguish between average total price and average volumetric price, highlighting the importance of fixed charges in consumer perception. Fourth, evidence as of late 2020 pointed toward consumers’ responding to average volumetric price, but it may be that this simply better approximates average total price than marginal or expected marginal prices; no studies have explicitly tested this. Finally, although information treatments can likely increase customers’ understanding of complex tariffs (and hence marginal price), it is likely a better use of resources to simplify tariffs and pair increased volumetric charges with enhanced customer assistance programs to help poor customers, rather than relying on increasing block tariffs.
家庭对自来水服务的边际价格或平均价格有反应吗?
水务公司通常使用复杂的非线性收费结构来平衡多个收费目标。当这些关税发生变化时,消费者会有何反应?客户是对每个区块的边际容量价格做出反应,还是对平均价格做出反应?因为经验需求估计在很大程度上依赖于这个问题的答案,所以它已经在水、电和税收文献中讨论了50多年。为了以经济合理的方式优化用水,消费者必须了解关税结构和他们的消费。前者具有挑战性,因为关税是非线性的,账单上提供的关税信息不充分;后者是具有挑战性的,因为消费只被观察到一次,并且有一个滞后(在消费周期结束时)。大量的实证研究表明,当被问及时,消费者对关税结构、边际价格和(通常)他们的用水量知之甚少。自2010年以来的几项研究使用了更清晰的因果识别方法,即回归不连续方法,利用自然实验跨越关税结构的变化、公用事业服务区域边界的变化、计费周期的变化或组合。三项研究发现了明确的证据,表明消费者会对平均容量价格做出反应。两项研究发现了消费者对边际价格做出反应的证据,尽管在这两项研究中,价格的变化可能特别显著。一项研究没有明确排除平均价格反应的可能性。只有一项研究考察了对平均总价的反应,其中包括账单中固定的、非容量的部分。这里有五条建议给水务专业人士。首先,不应将对复杂的关税表和边际价格的不关注与对所有价格的不关注混为一谈:消费者确实会对价格的变化做出反应,价格应该仍然是管理稀缺性和提高经济效率的重要工具。其次,有大量证据表明,大多数客户不了解复杂的关税,可能不会对边际价格的变化做出反应。第三,大多数研究未能明确区分平均总价和平均体积价,突出了固定收费在消费者认知中的重要性。第四,截至2020年底的证据表明,消费者对平均体积价格有反应,但这可能只是更接近平均总价格,而不是边际或预期边际价格;没有研究明确地验证过这一点。最后,尽管信息处理可能会增加客户对复杂关税的理解(从而提高边际价格),但简化关税并将增加的容量收费与增强的客户援助计划相结合以帮助贫困客户,而不是依赖于提高整体关税,可能是更好地利用资源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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