TY - JOUR
T1 - Balancing Information Rents and Service Differentiation in Utility Regulation
AU - Bogetoft, Peter
AU - Eskesen, Anita
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - In the regulation of natural monopolies such as regional utilities, several goals must be balanced. In this paper, we focus on the trade-off between information rents and service differentiation. Consumers in different regions may prefer different service levels and service mixes. The services provided should therefore ideally be aligned with the preferences of regional consumers. The utilities, however, have superior information about the cost of different services. This allows them to extract information rents by claiming high costs for the provided services. A relative performance evaluation in the form of benchmarking is typically used to limit information rents, but benchmarking is less efficient when service profiles are heterogenous. Hence, there is a trade-off between minimizing information rents and maximizing the adjustment to consumer preferences via service differentiation. In this paper, we study this trade-off in a simple principal–agent model and discuss how it may limit the usefulness of recent regulatory frameworks based on dialog and negotiations with utilities about which services to provide.
AB - In the regulation of natural monopolies such as regional utilities, several goals must be balanced. In this paper, we focus on the trade-off between information rents and service differentiation. Consumers in different regions may prefer different service levels and service mixes. The services provided should therefore ideally be aligned with the preferences of regional consumers. The utilities, however, have superior information about the cost of different services. This allows them to extract information rents by claiming high costs for the provided services. A relative performance evaluation in the form of benchmarking is typically used to limit information rents, but benchmarking is less efficient when service profiles are heterogenous. Hence, there is a trade-off between minimizing information rents and maximizing the adjustment to consumer preferences via service differentiation. In this paper, we study this trade-off in a simple principal–agent model and discuss how it may limit the usefulness of recent regulatory frameworks based on dialog and negotiations with utilities about which services to provide.
KW - Incentive regulation
KW - Yardstick competition
KW - Natural monopolies
KW - Service differetiation
KW - Information rents
KW - Incentive regulation
KW - Yardstick competition
KW - Natural monopolies
KW - Service differentiation
KW - Information rents
U2 - 10.1016/j.eneco.2022.105808
DO - 10.1016/j.eneco.2022.105808
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0140-9883
VL - 106
JO - Energy Economics
JF - Energy Economics
M1 - 105808
ER -