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Measuring Market Inefficiencies in California's Restructured Wholesale Electricity Market

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Measuring Market Inefficiencies in California's Restructured Wholesale Electricity Market
Abstract
We present a method for decomposing wholesale electricity payments into production costs, inframarginal competitive rents, and payments resulting from the exercise of market power. Using data from June 1998 to October 2000 in California, we find significant departures from competitive pricing during the high-demand summer months and near-competitive pricing during the lower-demand months of the first two years. In summer 2000, wholesale electricity expenditures were 8.98 billion up from 2.04 billion in summer 1999. We find that 21 percent of this increase was due to production costs, 20 percent to competitive rents, and 59 percent to market power.
Publication
American Economic Review
Volume
92
Issue
5
Pages
1376-1405
Date
2002-12
Citation
Borenstein, S., Bushnell, J. B., & Wolak, F. A. (2002). Measuring Market Inefficiencies in California’s Restructured Wholesale Electricity Market. American Economic Review, 92, 1376–1405.
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