Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries

The introduction of competition into utilities is currently being pursued in the many countries, including the UK. Competition can take various forms, such as competition for outputs, inputs, franchises, and outright takeovers. Attention is currently focused on output competition, whereby customers...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jenkinson, T, Helm, D
Format: Journal article
Published: 1997
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author Jenkinson, T
Helm, D
author_facet Jenkinson, T
Helm, D
author_sort Jenkinson, T
collection OXFORD
description The introduction of competition into utilities is currently being pursued in the many countries, including the UK. Competition can take various forms, such as competition for outputs, inputs, franchises, and outright takeovers. Attention is currently focused on output competition, whereby customers are being given a choice of final supplier in many industries. We consider the implications of the introduction of such competition, including the effects on industrial structure and contracts, cross-subsidies and distributional concerns, and uncertainty and stranded contracts. We also analyse the transitional problems encountered as competition is introduced and suggest that the UK regulators and government have, in some key respects, failed to define a clear and consistent policy.
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spelling oxford-uuid:99feb2b9-8291-4bc6-b055-1628e0e6cef72022-03-27T00:18:17ZIntroducing Competition into Regulated IndustriesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:99feb2b9-8291-4bc6-b055-1628e0e6cef7Saïd Business School - Eureka1997Jenkinson, THelm, DThe introduction of competition into utilities is currently being pursued in the many countries, including the UK. Competition can take various forms, such as competition for outputs, inputs, franchises, and outright takeovers. Attention is currently focused on output competition, whereby customers are being given a choice of final supplier in many industries. We consider the implications of the introduction of such competition, including the effects on industrial structure and contracts, cross-subsidies and distributional concerns, and uncertainty and stranded contracts. We also analyse the transitional problems encountered as competition is introduced and suggest that the UK regulators and government have, in some key respects, failed to define a clear and consistent policy.
spellingShingle Jenkinson, T
Helm, D
Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries
title Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries
title_full Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries
title_fullStr Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries
title_full_unstemmed Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries
title_short Introducing Competition into Regulated Industries
title_sort introducing competition into regulated industries
work_keys_str_mv AT jenkinsont introducingcompetitionintoregulatedindustries
AT helmd introducingcompetitionintoregulatedindustries