The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada
Current North American water pricing practices are inefficient because they are based on average utility expenditures rather than marginal costs and because they typically neglect factors such as the cyclicity of demands, the time of consumption and the value of the water resource. Despite strong cr...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-307782018-01-05T17:45:41Z The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada Renzetti, Steven Water-supply -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Rates Current North American water pricing practices are inefficient because they are based on average utility expenditures rather than marginal costs and because they typically neglect factors such as the cyclicity of demands, the time of consumption and the value of the water resource. Despite strong criticisms of these practices (Hirshleifer, DeHaven and Milliman, 1960; Pearse, 1985) and the presence of well articulated theoretical models of efficient pricing alternatives (eg., peak-load pricing) no empirical study has been done to document the magnitude of the efficiency gains from altering water prices. A simulation program computes the impact upon a representative water utility's output and deficit and upon aggregate consumer surplus of a move from current practice to efficient prices. The program is based on the estimated costs of supply and demand for water for the city of Vancouver, Canada. A time series of quarterly observations for the period 1975-1986 is used to estimate short and long run marginal costs. The estimated cost structure of the utility is also used to test for optimal employment of its fixed factors: water in storage and capital. Cross-sectional data sets are used to estimate market demands for residential and industrial users. The estimation results indicate that long run marginal cost exceeds short run costs by a large margin and that there is some evidence of over-capitalization by the utility. Water demands are seen to be inelastic for indoor and outdoor residential consumption but are elastic for industrial consumption. Simulation results show that a move to seasonally differentiated pricing (with an annual charge calculated to recoup the resulting deficit) raises aggregate surplus by approximately 4%. Conversely, a move from current practice to Ramsey prices leads to a decrease in aggregate consumer surplus of approximately 13%. Arts, Faculty of Vancouver School of Economics Graduate 2011-01-24T21:34:33Z 2011-01-24T21:34:33Z 1990 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30778 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia |
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English |
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Water-supply -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Rates |
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Water-supply -- British Columbia -- Vancouver -- Rates Renzetti, Steven The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada |
description |
Current North American water pricing practices are inefficient because they are based on average utility expenditures rather than marginal costs and because they typically neglect factors such as the cyclicity of demands, the time of consumption and the value of the water resource. Despite strong criticisms of these practices (Hirshleifer, DeHaven and Milliman, 1960; Pearse, 1985) and the presence of well articulated theoretical models of efficient pricing alternatives (eg., peak-load pricing) no empirical study has been done to document the magnitude of the efficiency gains from altering water prices.
A simulation program computes the impact upon a representative water utility's output and deficit and upon aggregate consumer surplus of a move from current practice to efficient prices. The program is based on the estimated costs of supply and demand for water for the city of Vancouver, Canada. A time series of quarterly observations for the period 1975-1986 is used to estimate short and long run marginal costs. The estimated cost structure of the utility is also used to test for optimal employment of its fixed factors: water in storage and capital. Cross-sectional data sets are used to estimate market demands for residential and industrial users.
The estimation results indicate that long run marginal cost exceeds short run costs by a large margin and that there is some evidence of over-capitalization by the utility. Water demands are seen to be inelastic for indoor and outdoor residential consumption but are elastic for industrial consumption. Simulation results show that a move to seasonally differentiated pricing (with an annual charge calculated to recoup the resulting deficit) raises aggregate surplus by approximately 4%. Conversely, a move from current practice to Ramsey prices leads to a decrease in aggregate consumer surplus of approximately 13%. === Arts, Faculty of === Vancouver School of Economics === Graduate |
author |
Renzetti, Steven |
author_facet |
Renzetti, Steven |
author_sort |
Renzetti, Steven |
title |
The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada |
title_short |
The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada |
title_full |
The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada |
title_fullStr |
The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada |
title_full_unstemmed |
The economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in Vancouver, Canada |
title_sort |
economics of seemingly abundant resource : efficient water pricing in vancouver, canada |
publisher |
University of British Columbia |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30778 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT renzettisteven theeconomicsofseeminglyabundantresourceefficientwaterpricinginvancouvercanada AT renzettisteven economicsofseeminglyabundantresourceefficientwaterpricinginvancouvercanada |
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1718594198713663488 |