Abstract:
The aim of this paper is to assess
the impact of the regulatory policy on both technical and allocative
efficiency for the England and Wales water and sewerage industry after
privatisation. Previous empirical results suggest that the regulatory
system introduced at privatisation was too lax (Saal and Parker, 2000)
and the evidence that the first price review in 1994 produced
efficiency gains is still quite ambiguous (Saal and Parker, 2001 and
2004). The 1999 price review signalled a change in the regulatory
policy by imposing a price reduction, which might be expected to lead
to a faster increase in efficiency. This paper evaluates the impact of
the tightening in the regulatory regime and of other operational
factors on efficiency through a two-stage approach derived from Fried
et al.
(2002). The 1999 price setting is shown to have a significant impact
on the reduction of technical inefficiency.
Furthermore the new economic environment set by price-cap regulation,
along with the need for capital renewals and investments, acted to
bring inputs closer to their cost-minimising optimal levels. |