Jim Bushnell (UCEI)
In the aftermath of the California energy crisis, there has been a shift
in the focus of electricity regulators away from the fostering of a competitive
market structure and towards the application of regulations to specific
market outcomes. Such a focus stands in marked contrast to the general
principles governing competition policies in other industries. This
shift is in part influenced by the clear failure of earlier attempts to
establish a competitive market structure in California. But was this
a failure of the policy, or of the tools that were used to implement it?
In this chapter, I describe the tests historically used by regulators as
screens for the potential abuse of market power by suppliers. More advanced
methods, such as models of oligopoly competition, can potentially provide
a much better understanding of the competitive outlook for a market.
However, much uncertainty surrounds the development and application of such
models. I apply an oligopoly model of the California market to actual
market data to test the ability of such models to recreate true market outcomes.
I also explore the potential impact of an alternative plan for the divestiture
of California's thermal generation units. The results indicate that
a more substantial, but still plausible, reduction in supplier concentration
would have saved consumers nearly $2 billion during the summer of 2000.
Download this paper in Adobe Acrobat format: http://www.ucei.org/PDF/csemwp109.pdf
The document can be downloaded or viewed using Adobe's Acrobat Reader
(version 4.0 or later). If you do not have Acrobat Reader, you can download
it from Adobe. To DOWNLOAD the documents right mouse click on the name and
then click again on "Save link as..."