Americans Forego 10 Billion-Dollar Benefit From Deregulating Electricity
Oct 25 - PRNewswire
TORONTO, Oct. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- Retail electricity consumers could save up to 9 percent of their power bill in states that have yet to deregulate their electricity markets, according to Power Jolt Required: Measuring the Impact of Electricity Deregulation, released today by The Fraser Institute. And, in total, American consumers would save $10 billion from lower electricity prices if every state matched the best practices of the thirteen fully deregulated states.
The report assesses how deregulation affects new electricity supply and
retail pricing. The report examines the experiences of global deregulation
reform leaders in the U.S., Canada, Australia, the U.K. and New Zealand. It
finds that thirteen states are leading the way in American deregulation.
The study finds that deregulating jurisdictions have attracted more new
generation supply than non-reformers, with 80 percent faster per capita growth
in the U.S. over the latest five years - and even more in Canada. Generation
growth has been consistently high in the U.K. and Australia, but somewhat weaker
in New Zealand.
Deregulation has also lowered after-inflation electricity prices in the U.S.,
the U.K. and Australia. For example, retail residential prices for U.S. state
reformers dropped 80 percent faster than non-reformers over the latest five
years and non-residential prices dropped 65 percent faster. Prices in Alberta
and New Zealand have risen for exceptional reasons unrelated to deregulation.
U.S. states that have yet to reform could deregulate and drop prices there by
7 percent to almost 9 percent over five years. This is double the price drop
that actually occurred in non-reforming states between 1997 and 2002. Similar
gains are achievable in non-reforming jurisdictions in Australia and Canada.
Consumers and taxpayers everywhere can reap these economic gains from
deregulation by introducing customer choice, competition, privatization, market
pricing and effective regulation.
"It is a fallacy that the electricity market cannot be
deregulated," said Mullins. "Even the short-run experience since the
late 1990s shows significant supply and pricing benefits in reforming
jurisdictions. The real constraints on deriving consumer benefits from this
industry are public misconceptions and the unwillingness of many politicians to
create positive change."
CONTACT: Mark Mullins, Director of Ontario Policy Studies
The Fraser Institute, Tel. (416) 363-6575, ext. 225
Email markm@fraserinstitute.ca
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Established in 1974, The Fraser Institute is an independent public
policy organization with offices in Vancouver, Calgary, and Toronto.
The media release and study (in PDF) are available at
http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/
The Fraser Institute
CONTACT: Mark Mullins, Director of Ontario Policy Studies, The
FraserInstitute, Tel. (416) 363-6575, ext. 225, Email markm@fraserinstitute.ca