This paper is an empirical assessment of the comparative efficiency of
governance structures in an environment marked by high uncertainty. We analyze
the short-term impact of retail deregulation on the productive efficiency
of electric utilities in the United States. We argue that there are transitory
costs linked to the process of deregulation. The business strategy literature
suggests different governance structures to cope with uncertainty linked
to changing regulatory environments. Transaction cost economics suggests
that firms may reduce their exposure to the uncertainty created by the process
of deregulation by adopting vertical integration strategies. Organizational
scholars on the contrary argue that firms vertically disintegrate and adopt
flexible governance structures to increase their adaptability to the new
conditions. Our empirical analysis is based on 177 investor-owned electric
utilities representing 83% of the total U.S. electricity production by utilities
from 1998-2001. Our results show that the process of deregulation has a
negative impact on firms’ productive efficiency measured using Data Envelopment
Analysis. However, firms that are vertically integrated into electricity
generation or that rely on the market for the supply of their electricity
are more efficient than firms that adopt hybrid structures combining vertical
integration and contracting.
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