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ECW3830

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Regulation, deregulation and. privatisation in small open economies. Week 13. Revision. Theories of Regulation. Aims. On completion of the topic students should ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECW3830


1
ECW3830
Competition and Regulation
2
Lecture 2
Theories of regulation
3
Week 7 Hilmer report and industry restructuring
Week 5-6 Regulating monopolies and access to
essential facilities
Week 8 Liberalisation in aviation
Week 4 Theories and practice of privatisation
Competition and Regulation
Week 9 Structural reform and regulation in
electricity
Week 3 Deregulation rationales and experiences
Week 10 Competition and regulation in
telecommunications
Week 2 Theories of regulation
Week 11 Mergers, Cartels and restrictive
practices
Week 1 Rationale for competition policy and
regulation
Week 12 - Research topic. Regulation,
deregulation and privatisation in small open
economies
Week 13 Revision
4
AimsOn completion of the topic students should
be able to
  • Explain the rationale for regulation
  • Distinguish types of economic regulation
  • Explain the rationale for and merits of different
    theories of regulation

5
Essential Reading
Theories of Regulation
  • Church, Industrial Chapter 24, p 747-762,
    765-775
  • Pelzman, S (1998), The Economic Theory of
    Regulation after a Decade of Deregulation, in R
    Baldwin, C Scott and C Hood (eds) A Reader on
    Regulation, Oxford UP, p93-130
  • Additional reading available on line
  • Stigler, G (1971), The Theory of Economic
    Regulation, Bell Journal of Economics, vol.2
    p3-21
  • Joskow, P Rose, N (1989), The Effects of
    Economic Regulation in Schmalensee, R Willig,
    R. Handbook of Industrial Organization, North
    Holland. p1449-1499

6
Reasons for regulation
What is regulated
Who regulates
Direct control, rules, regulations
Types of economic regulation
Financial incentives
Price controls and monopoly regulation
Entry and capacity control
Public interest theories
Theories of regulation
Private interest theories
Does regulation promote efficiency?
7
Key definitions and concepts
Regulation
8
Key definitions and concepts
Regulation
Product market, consumers
Product
A Firm
Capital
Labour
Labour market
Capital market
Material of financial flows
9
Key definitions and concepts
Regulation
Product market, consumers
Product
Price
A Firm
Wage rate
Capital
Labour
Price, Interest rate
Labour market
Capital market
Material of financial flows
Market information
10
Rationale for competition policy and regulation
Key definitions and concepts
Regulation
Tax rates Tariffs Retail trade regulation
Product market, consumers
Product
Price
Tax rates tariffs, barriers to entry Product
quality and safy
A Firm
A regulator
Official Interest rates
Wage rate
Capital
Labour
Price, Interest rate
Tax rates workplace relations regulation
Labour market
Capital market
Material of financial flows
Market information
Regulator's (official ) control signals
11
What is regulated
Product Regulation. Consumer safety
Structure, conduct an performance of the industry
Foreign investment and foreign interest
involvement in national economy
Industry protection (Trade policies)
Environment conservation
Workplace
Property rights
12
What is regulated
Product Regulation. Consumer safety
  • Where private and social benefits cannot be
    matched by market forces
  • Car/ motorbike safety
  • Health care
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Air
  • Noise

13
What is regulated
Structure, conduct an performance of the industry
  • Where the industry structure deviates from a
    perfectly competitive market
  • Restricted trade practices
  • Cartels, collusions
  • Access prising

14
What is regulated
Foreign investment and foreign interest
involvement in national economy
  • Where foreign interest might contradict national
    interest
  • Which industries
  • The share of foreign interests
  • The size of foreign investments
  • (In Australia the Foreign Investment Review
    Board)

15
What is regulated
Industry protection (Trade policies)
  • Where the government acts on behalf of interest
    groups (of producers or consumers)
  • Tariffs
  • Import quotas
  • Export quotas
  • Export subsidies
  • Quarantine regulations

16
What is regulated
Environment conservation
  • Where negative externalities affecting the
    environment take place
  • Forestry
  • Greenhouse emission
  • Water usage
  • Nuclear Energy
  • Mining
  • Automotive

17
What is regulated
Workplace
  • Where there is now perfect competition in the
    labour market (employers and/or employees
    exercise some market power)
  • Workplace relations
  • Where negative externalities affecting workers
    take place
  • Occupational safety

18
What is regulated
Property rights
  • Where industry conduct is concerned
  • Real estate trading
  • Securities trading
  • Publicly listed companies conduct with relation
    to shareholders

19
Who regulates
  • The government
  • In Australia 3 levels
  • Independent agencies appointed by the government
  • ACCC
  • Australian Securities Commission
  • The Reserve Bank
  • Foreign Investment Review Board
  • Self-regulation by the industry concerned
  • Victorian Medical Board

20
Reasons for regulation
21
Reasons for regulation
For allocation purposes
  • Public goods
  • the market mechanism is perceived unable to
    determine the "right" amount which should be
    produced.
  • Externalities
  • The product attracts too many or too few
    resources, depending on whether the externality
    is negative or positive
  • Declining average cost (the case of natural
    monopoly)
  • Access regulation

22
Reasons for regulation
For the correction of competitive imperfections
  • Antitrust legislation (in US and formerly in
    Australia)
  • Restrictive trade practices legislation (broader
    context)
  • Entry licensing

23
Reasons for regulation
For the correction of the distribution of wealth
  • Social security
  • Access to essential facilities/goods
  • Price regulation

24
Reasons for regulation
For avoiding negative externalities
  • Consumer protection
  • Environment conservation
  • Aviation safety

25
Types of economic regulation
Direct control, rules, regulations
Financial incentives
26
Types of economic regulation
Direct control, rules, regulations
  • Legislation/enforcement
  • Rules codified by the legislature
  • Regulation/rules/codes
  • Issued by bureaucracy based on the existing
    legislation
  • Licenses
  • Mines
  • Taxies
  • Airlines
  • Broadcast frequencies
  • Quotas
  • import/export
  • Allocations
  • water
  • Broadcast frequencies

27
Types of economic regulation
Financial incentives
  • Tax breaks
  • Subsidies to industries
  • Interest rates
  • Tariffs
  • Export subsides
  • Prices for public goods

28
Entry and capacity control
  • Entry licensing on a rule or case by case basis
  • Airlines
  • Taxies
  • Mines
  • Educational institutions
  • Capacity control cap on the output
  • Forestry
  • Fishery
  • Waling

29
Price controls and monopoly regulation
  • Price-cap regulation price cap is assigned to
    monopolys product
  • Marginal cost regulation
  • Revenue-cap regulation where total revenue is the
    regulated variable.
  • Rate-of-return regulation - utilities are
    permitted a set rate of return on capital
  • (See diagrams on a few further slides and compare
    them with the one on page 105 (Reeding 3) of the
    Unit book)

30
Price controls and monopoly regulation
Price-cap regulation
Lowest feasible cap P1cap min for a private
monopoly or P2 cap min - If it is a publicly
owned ran monopoly only responsible for its cash
flow.
D
Pmarket
AC
MC
MR
Y
Ymarket
31
Price controls and monopoly regulation
Marginal cost regulation
Feasible if PPMC AC for a private monopoly or
If it is a publicly owned ran monopoly only
responsible for its cash flow.
D
AC
MC
MR
Y
32
Theories of regulation
Towards classification of theories
Normative theories
Public interest theories
Positive theories
Private interest teories
33
Theories of regulation
Towards classification of theories
Positive theories Answer the question How
does regulation work The role of regulation
policies in advantaging of different sectoral
groups
Normative theories Answer the question What
and how to regulate Approaches to and methods
for the correction of market failure
Public interest theories
The Pareto Principle
The problem of second best
Capture theories
Stiglers theory Private interest
34
Theories of regulation
Normative theories
The Pareto Principle
The goal of regulation is maximum welfare of the
society
Societys resources will be used efficiently if
the result is maximum welfare.
  • What is welfare?
  • How to measure welfare?
  • How to allocate welfare among the members of
    society?

The Pareto Principle Welfare is at maximum when
no change in the way resources are used of goods
and services are distributed can make anybody
better off without reducing welfare at least of
one person
35
Theories of regulation
Normative theories
The Pareto Principle
The Pareto Principle is fulfilled if
  • For each pair of goods and any pair of consumers
    MRSxy(Consumer
    A) MRSxy(Consumer B) MRSxy(Consumer C)
  • MRSxyPx/Py
  • MRTSKLPK/PL,and
  • all producers operate at PMC

and if
  • No public goods (the market mechanism can't
    determine the amount to be produced)
  • No externalities
  • No declining cost industries

The regulation is necessary to compensate
non-fulfillment of last three assumptions
36
Theories of regulation
The problem of second best
Normative theories
The theory that neglects usefulness of any
normative approach ln the real life at least
one of Paretian conditions is not
fulfilled. Therefore the best solution -
Paretian optimum is impossible and should be
replaced with a second best one. However, there
are no any rules a normative theory for the
selection of second best and therefore The
science of making a regulatory decision is
replaced with art of politics, which can be
explained only by positive theories.
37
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Attempts to explain the nature and mechanisms of
regulation Based on multi-disciplinary
studies Include elements of economics, political
science, sociology and social psychology
38
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Public interest theory
The regulation is necessary to compensate
inequitable and/or allocatively inefficient
market outcomes to protect public interest
public interest consumer interest, employment
maintenance,
infrastructure maintenance, etc
The reason of failure of regulatory measures -
mismanagement
39
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Capture theories
The deficiency of public interest theory it
ignores differences in the interests of different
groups of the society (consumers, producers,
policy makers, etc).
Life-cycle theories
Private interest theories
40
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Capture theories
Life-cycle theories
Regulation intended to serve some particular
public interest. However, the groups of
regulated industries become to be able to affect
their regulators (governmental regulatory bodies)

or
Regulation was imposed by a majority political
group to serve public interest. However,
overtime it becomes to serve the interest of the
supporters of that political group.
41
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Capture theories
Private interest theories
Stiglers theory
42
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Stiglers theory
Main ideas The regulation serves industry not
public interest A regulated industry is a
state-sanctioned cartel
43
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Stiglers theory
The Demand for Regulation
  • Barriers to entry
  • A direct subsidy of money
  • State regulation affecting substitutes and
    complements
  • State price fixing

44
Theories of regulation
Positive theories
Stiglers theory
Supply costs
  • Non-profit-maximising form of delivery.
    Equalisation of advantages from regulation
  • The very cost of the bureaucracy of regulation
  • The distribution of advantages outside the
    industry

The industry seeks for the level and structure of
regulation where benefits superseed costs
45
Does regulation promote efficiency?
  • Milton Friedman
  • Government should limit its involvement in
    economies to protecting individual rights (life,
    liberty, property) rather than diminishing
    individual autonomy and responsibility for the
    sake of remedying any sort of "market failure.
  • The notion of market failure is wrongly used to
    justify coercive government action to further
    various political agendas,
  • Government intervention creates more problems and
    than it is supposed to solve
  • Some of these interventions may be because
    government officers are incapable of accurate
    economic calculation

46
Does regulation promote efficiency?
  • The Austrian School economists (Ludwig von Mises
    and others)
  • Regulations as problematic not only because they
    disrupt market processes, but also because they
    tend only to bring about more regulations.
  • Every regulation has some consequences besides
    those originally intended when the regulation was
    implemented.
  • If the unintended consequences are undesirable to
    those with the power to regulate, there exist two
    alternative possibilities
  • do away with the existing regulation, or
  • keep the existing regulation and institute a new
    one as well to treat the unintended consequence
    of the old one. (Thr second option is often
    preferred)

47
Revision questions for the next weektutorial
  • Stigler argued that regulation rather than being
    imposed on an industry was in fact actively
    sought by the industry concerned.
  • Why might an industry seek to be regulated
  • Bring an example of a regulatory policy which is
    an advantage for a regulated industry
  • Bring an example of a regulatory policy which
    seems to be a disadvantage for a regulated
    industry, but an advantage for the welfare of
    nation
  • Bring an example of a regulatory policy which
    seems to be a disadvantage for a regulated
    industry, but also appears to be a disadvantage
    for the welfare of nation.
  • Bring an example of a regulatory measure in
    Australia (or in any other country) which was
    supposed to serve public interest but in fact
    serves private interest
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