基于绩效的电力监管和成本基准:理论基础和应用

IF 1.4 4区 经济学 Q3 ECONOMICS
Agustin J. Ros, Sai Shetty, Timothy Tardiff
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引用次数: 0

摘要

基于绩效的监管("PBR")直接监管公用事业的价格或收入,目的是提供比服务成本(利润)监管更强的激励机制,以实现效率和其他成本节约。基于成本的价格和收入监管计划通常包括一个公式,对允许的价格或收入设置上限,上限的计算反映了我们在竞争市场中长期观察到的情况:价格设置为等于投入价格减去生产率 "I-X",其中 I 代表通货膨胀,X 代表整个行业的生产率。生产成本加成公式还可能包括消费者伸缩系数("伸缩系数")--有时也称为消费者生产率红利。一些监管机构认为,拉伸系数是一次性的,目的是在被监管公司从服务成本监管过渡到 PBR 监管时,在公司和客户之间分享生产率增长的直接预期增长。另一些监管机构则将其视为 PBR 的永久性组成部分,旨在通过将被监管公司的成本与一组可比公司的成本进行比较,并奖励(惩罚)其优异(低劣)的成本绩效,从而激励被监管公司在最初转为 PBR 后的发展。本文重点讨论了将拉伸系数作为 PBR 永久特征的经济方面,更重要的是,利用成本基准来确定 PBR 计划中的拉伸系数的理论基础。我们回顾了有关计量经济学成本基准的学术文献,并就拉伸系数对这些文献进行了评估。我们利用美国电力传输数据,提供了计量经济学成本基准分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Performance based regulation in electricity and cost benchmarking: theoretical underpinnings and application

Performance based regulation (“PBR”) directly regulates public utilities’ prices or revenues with the goal to provide greater incentives for achieving efficiencies and other cost savings than cost-of-service (profit) regulation provides. PBR plans typically include a formula capping the allowed prices or revenues with the cap calculated to reflect what we would expect to observe in competitive markets in the long run: prices are set to equal input prices minus productivity “I–X”, where I represents inflation and X represents industry-wide productivity. The PBR formula may also include a consumer stretch factor (“stretch factor”)—sometimes referred to as a consumer productivity dividend. Some regulators view the stretch factor as a one-time component meant to share between the company and customers the immediate expected increase in productivity growth as the regulated firm transitions from cost of service to PBR regulation. Other regulators view it more as a permanent component of PBR meant to incentivize the regulated firm beyond the initial switch to PBR by benchmarking its costs to a comparable group of companies and rewarding (penalizing) it for superior (inferior) cost performance. This paper focuses on economic aspects of utilizing the stretch factor as a permanent feature of PBR, and importantly, on the theoretical underpinnings of utilizing cost benchmarking to determine the stretch factor in a PBR plan. We provide a review of the academic literature on econometric cost benchmarking and assess that literature with respect to the stretch factor. We provide an econometric cost benchmarking analysis, using data on U.S. electricity transmission.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Recent legislative and policy reforms have changed the nature of regulation. Partial deregulation has created a new dimension to regulatory problems, as the debate is extended to include diversification and new forms of regulation. The introduction of incentive-based rate schedules and ratemaking procedures, the integration of demand-side programs with planning for capitol expansion, and other developments, raise a host of theoretical and empirical questions. The Journal of Regulatory Economics serves as a high quality forum for the analysis of regulatory theories and institutions by developing the rigorous economics foundations of regulation. Both theoretical and applied works, including experimental research, are encouraged. Research in all aspects of regulation is of interest including traditional problems of natural monopoly, antitrust and competition policy, incentive regulation, deregulation, auction theory, new policy instruments, health and safety regulation, environmental regulation, insurance and financial regulation, hazardous and solid waste regulation, universal service obligation, and consumer product regulation. The JRE provides researchers, policy-makers, and institutions with current perspectives on the theory and practice of economics of regulation. While there are a number of journals and magazines that include the study of regulation, the JRE is unique in that it fills a gap in the market for a high quality journal dealing solely with the economics of regulation.Officially cited as: J Regul Econ
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