Title: Developing Marginal Cost-Based Rates
1Developing MarginalCost-Based Rates
Kelly Eakin Senior Vice President Christensen
Associates Energy Consulting APPA Business and
Financial Conference Austin, TX September 25,
2007
2Objectives of Presentation
- Provide a framework to evaluate social gains from
marginal cost pricing and address the challenge
of fixed cost recovery - Identify key determinants to marginal cost
pricing gains - Look for ways to incorporate pricing efficiency
principles into cost of service analysis
3Business Objectives
- Revenue Sufficiency
- Maximizing stakeholder value
4Outline
- Economics Basics
- The Regulatory Dilemma
- Incorporating Marginal Cost Pricing Principles
into Cost of Service Analysis - A Simple Stylized Example
- Conclusions
5Economics Basics
6Demand
- Consumers are willing to pay for a good because
it brings them some benefit or satisfaction - As more of a good is consumed, the additional or
marginal benefit decreases (law of diminishing
returns) - Consequently, the consumers willingness to pay
for another unit of a good decreases as
consumption increases - Law of Demand Consumers will buy more of a good
a lower prices, other things the same - Price Elasticity of Demand
- A measure of customer price responsiveness
- eD change in quantity demanded change
in price
7The Demand Curve
Price
P1
P2
D marginal benefit
Q1
Q2
QuantityDemanded
8Costs
- Costs reflect the supply side of a market
- For goods to come to market, a supplier needs to
expect at least to recover (variable) costs
9Cost Measures (1)
- Total Costs
- Variable Cost costs associated with the inputs
that change as production levels change - Fixed Cost costs that remain the same
regardless of the production level, sometimes
called sunk costs (e.g., capital costs) - Total Cost Variable Cost Fixed Cost or
TCVCFC
10Cost Measures (2)
- Average Cost Concepts
- Average Variable Cost (AVC)
- Variable cost per unit of output AVCTVC/Q
- Average Fixed Cost (AFC)
- Fixed cost per unit of output AFC/Q
- AFC decreases as output increases (spreading out
the overhead) - Average Total Cost (ATC)
- Cost per unit of output
- ATC TC/Q
- ATC AVC AFC
- The utility industry term average embedded
cost corresponds closely to the economic term
average total cost
11Cost Measures (3)
- Marginal Cost (MC)
- Marginal cost measures how cost changes as an
additional unit of output is produced - MC ?TC/?Q ?TVC/?Q
- Marginal cost is the supply schedule for a
competitive profit-maximizing firm - A supply schedule is more ambiguous if there is a
lack of competition or the firm is not a profit
maximizer
12Cost Measures (4)
- Fixed Costs
- Common costoverhead costs that occurs regardless
of product lines offered, production levels or
customer classes served - Class-specific fixed costcosts that do not vary
with production levels but that are avoidable if
a customer class is not served - Product-specific fixed costcosts that do not
vary with production levels but that are
avoidable if a product line is not produced - Fixed cost recovery can introduce price
distortion and resulting social value loss
(called economic inefficiency)
13Cost Measures (5)
- Incremental Cost (ICi)
- Incremental cost indicates the additional cost of
adding a product line or serving another customer
class - Subtle differences from marginal cost
- Discrete change instead of incremental change
- May involve some product/class specific fixed
(but avoidable) costs - ICi TC TC without Qi TC TC( Qi)
- Average Incremental Cost (AICi)
- AICi ICi/Qi
- Important concept in investigating cross-subsidies
14Cost Concepts (6)
- Finally, pulling in some cost of service concepts
- Attributable costs (or directly assigned costs)
are those costs that can be assigned as caused
by serving a customer class - Variable costs
- Class-specific fixed costs
- Product-specific fixed costs for products serving
only one customer class - Non-attributable coststhose costs that occur
regardless of whether a particular customer class
is served - Common costs
- Product-specific fixed costs for products serving
all customer classes
15Cross-Subsidization
- Charging some more than attributable cost so that
others pay less than their attributable cost - Different criteria for cross-subsidization
- Price vs. Average Total Cost
- Price vs. Average Variable Cost
- Price vs. Marginal Cost
- Price vs. Average Incremental Cost
- Cross-subsidization involves
- Inefficiency
- Fairness issue
16Cross-Subsidization
- Pi lt AICi
- Revenue from class less than its incremental cost
- Serving the class adds to the overhead
contribution required from other classes - Other classes would pay less if this class were
not served - The class is receiving a cross-subsidy from other
classes - Pi AICi
- Revenue just covers incremental cost but class
makes no contribution to overhead - No impact on other classes
- No cross-subsidy
- Pi gt AICi
- Revenue from class more than its incremental cost
- the class makes a contribution to overhead
- Other classes would pay more if this class were
not served - No cross-subsidy
17Economic Efficiency
- Economic efficiency occurs when resources are
used in a way that generates the greatest
economic value - Price Marginal Cost is the efficiency condition
- P gt MC too little produced additional value
would exceed additional cost - P lt MC too much produced additional cost of last
unit more than offsets additional value - PMC maximum net benefit no way to reallocate
resources to increase economic value
18The Efficiency of Competition
Firm
Industry
ATC
MC
S MC
P
P
D MB
q
Q nq
19The Efficiency and Fairness of Competition
- Efficiency
- P MC ? economic output distributed to
consumers in a manner that achieves the greatest
economic value - MC ATC ? production is allocated among
producers so that total production cost is
minimized - Fairness
- P ATC ? producers just break even covering
their variable costs and earning a fair rate of
return on capital investment also called earning
normal profit of zero economic profit - This condition is the result of no barriers to
entry or exit - The result of individuals pursuing
self-interest, but the outcome is as if an
invisible hand of a benevolent planner
allocated the resources
20The Invisible Hand
21The Regulatory Dilemma
22Alas, competition and efficiency may not prevail
- Industry might not be competitive
- Barriers to entry
- Large economies of scale
- Firms might not be profit-maximizers
- Public power has stakeholders rather than
shareholders - Other non-profit organizations have objectives
other than maximizing profit - Revenue adequacy still a requirement, but
efficiency may not be a result
23Natural Monopoly
- Economies of scale exist if average cost
decreases as a firms production increases - A natural monopoly has economies of scale over a
large range of production relative to market
demand - One firm can produce market output at a lower
total cost than can two or more firms - Often have large overhead costs resulting from
heavy capital investment (i.e., capital intensive
industries) - Often involve basic needs such as water,
electricity
24Natural Monopoly
25Rationale for Regulation
- Promoting competition is inefficient in a natural
monopoly situation - Instead rate regulation is the policy
prescription - Called public utility regulation
- Trying to achieve competitive-type (invisible
hand) outcomes via regulation
26The Not-So Invisible Hand of Regulation
Intervenor Discovery
gt
Staff Intervenors Prefile Testimony
Staff Intervenors Present Witnesses
Company Presents Witnesses
File Case
Company Files Rebuttal
Cross Examination on Rebuttal
Submission of Briefs
Commission Decision
Commission Order
gt
gt
27The Natural Monopoly Dilemma
- A natural monopoly presents the regulator with a
dilemma - Left unregulated, the monopolist could charge
high prices resulting in inefficiency and a
transfer of wealth from customers to the
monopolist - Setting PMC results in efficiency but
insufficient revenues - Set PATC collects sufficient revenues but is
inefficient - Issue becomes more complex with multiple products
and customer classes
28The Natural Monopoly Dilemma PMC is efficient
but revenue inadequate
ATC
ATC
Losses
MC
P
D
Q
Q
29The Natural Monopoly Dilemma PATC collects
enough revenue but is inefficient
Efficiency Loss
ATC
P ATC
MC
D
Q
Q
Q
30Solutions to the Pricing Dilemma
- Simple markup pricing
- Absolute markup raise prices above marginal
costs by the same amount to all classes - Proportional markup raise prices above marginal
costs by the same percent to all classes
31Solutions to the Pricing Dilemma (2)
- Differential markup pricing
- Raise prices above marginal costs by different
percentages to different classes - Ramsey Pricing raises prices differentially to
minimize inefficiency - Price inverse to the elasticity of demand
- Same pattern as what a monopolist would do, only
to lesser magnitude
32Solutions to the Pricing Dilemma (3)
- Non-linear pricing
- Collect some fixed costs via a non-volumetric
charge (i.e., not per kWh or per kW) - If all fixed costs were collected
non-volumetrically, then per unit charge could be
set at marginal cost
33Incorporating Marginal Cost Pricing Principles
into Cost of Service Analysis Cost of Service
Basics
34Why investigate cost of service?
- Improve understanding of the business
- Help with rate design
- Requirement for rate case
35Basic Steps for a Traditional Cost of Service
Study
- Determine the Overall Revenue Requirement
- Establish the customer classes
- Attribute the attributable costs
- Allocate the non-attributable costs
- Set rates to achieve the revenue requirements
36A Modified Approach Marginal Cost-Based Cost
of Service
- Determine the Overall Revenue Requirement
- Establish the customer classes
- Attribute the attributable costs
- Set preliminary prices at marginal costs
- Conduct preliminary cross-subsidy analysis
- Mark up prices to subsidized classes to eliminate
cross-subsidies - Calculate revenue insufficiency
- Mark up prices to all classes to achieve revenue
requirement - Introduce revenue-neutral non-linear pricing to
improve pricing efficiency
37Challenges of the New Approach
- Estimating the marginal costs
- Costly to make numerous unbundled marginal cost
estimates - Estimating marginal costs of ancillary services,
transmission and distribution services is not
trivial - Nevertheless, these marginal costs should be
understood for business reasons beyond
cost-of-service studies - Incorporating demand response into cost of
service analysis - Essential for the pursuit of efficiency
- Not a comparative disadvantage vis à vis
traditional approach - Attributable costs may be a small fraction of
total costs
38Advantages of a Marginal Cost-BasedCost-of-Servic
e Approach
- Based on principles of economic efficiency
- Knowledge of marginal cost has many useful
business purposes separate of a cost-of-service
study - Less arbitrary allocation of costs
- May decrease the extent of cross-subsidization
39Simple Stylized Example
40Three Customer Classes
Customers Additional Sites Average Customer Annual Usage (kWH)
Residential 1,000,000 0 10,000
Commercial 50,000 10,000 100,000
Industrial 1,000 0 1,000,000
41Marginal Costs(Assuming constant marginal cost)
Customers (annual) Additional Sites (annual) Energy (/kWH)
Residential 100 - 0.10
Commercial 1,000 500 0.06
Industrial 5,000 - 0.04
42Cost Structure(Millions)
Fixed Costs Customer Cost Extra Site Costs Energy Cost TOTAL
Common Cost 400 - - - 400
Residential 80 100 - 1,000 1,180
Commercial 15 50 5 300 370
Industrial 5 5 - 40 50
TOTAL 500 155 5 1,340 2,000
43Approaches to Allocating Common Cost
- Method A Divide total fixed costs by total
usage - Ignores that some fixed costs are attributable
- Ignores that marginal costs differ across classes
- Allocation implicitly achieved by charging same
price per kWh across all classes - Method B Assign attributable fixed costs and
allocate common cost on a per kWh basis - Method C Assign attributable fixed costs and
allocate common cost according to shares of
attributable costs
44Alternative Allocations of Common Cost
Method A Method B Method C
Residential 70 250 295
Commercial 255 125 93
Industrial 75 25 13
TOTAL 400 400 400
45Cost Recovery Through Energy Pricing Only(/kWh)
Method A Method B Method C
Residential 0.125 0.143 0.148
Commercial 0.125 0.099 0.093
Industrial 0.125 0.075 0.063
46Incorporating Demand Response
- Assume the following price elasticities of demand
(eD) - eD
- Residential -0.05
- Commercial -0.10
- Industrial -0.20
- Also assuming linear demand curve and using
Method B prices and stipulated usage as the
reference point
47Recall the Efficiency Loss Triangle from Pricing
Away from Marginal Cost
Efficiency Loss
ATC
P ATC
MC
D
Q
Q
Q
48Economic Efficiency Analysis
- The efficiency loss or deadweight loss (DWL) in
each market can be approximated as - DWL -½ eD (Q/P) (P-MC)2
- Pricing inefficiency requires both
- Price differing from marginal cost
- Existence of price responsiveness (eD?0)
- Determinants of the magnitude of value loss
- Amount of fixed cost to be recovered
- Size of the price distortion
- Marginal cost
- Price responsiveness
49Efficiency Loss from Markup Pricing(Millions)
Method A Method B Method C
Residential 1.09 3.23 3.94
Commercial 10.67 3.84 2.67
Industrial 9.63 1.63 0.68
TOTAL 21.40 8.71 7.29
50Efficiency Loss as a Percentage of Class Revenue
Method A Method B Method C
Residential 0.09 0.23 0.27
Commercial 1.71 0.78 0.58
Industrial 7.71 2.18 1.08
TOTAL 1.07 0.44 0.36
51Non-linear Marginal Cost Prices
Monthly Customer Charge Monthly Additional Site Charge Energy Charge (/kWh)
Residential
Method A 20.83 0.10
Method B 35.83 0.10
Method C 39.58 0.10
Commercial
Method A 533.33 41.67 0.06
Method B 316.67 41.67 0.06
Method C 262.50 41.67 0.06
Industrial
Method A 7,083.33 0.04
Method B 2,916.67 0.04
Method C 1,875.00 0.04
52Non-linear Marginal Cost Prices
- The price schedules listed in the preceding table
are all economically efficient - The fixed charges are rolled into the customer
charge - The customer charge may be too steep to for some
customers within a class - For those classes can reduce the customer charge
and increase the energy charge - Use the marginal cost pricing as starting point
for adjustment - Inefficiency introduced by raising the energy
charge might not be great for very inelastic
demand
53Conclusions
54Foundation of a Foundation
- Cost of Service analysis provides a necessary
foundation for a rate case or rate setting - Marginal cost pricing principles provide a
foundation for the COS foundation - Structurally sound revenue recovery without
cross-subsidies - Level achieve competitive-type efficiency
- Earthquake proof framework that allows easy and
appropriate response to competitive threats and
other market dynamics
55Summary
- Marginal cost pricing principles and
cost-of-service objectives are compatible - Simultaneous pursuit of revenue sufficiency and
maximum stakeholder value - Recovery of fixed cost is the big challenge
- Recovery of fixed cost via fixed charges the most
efficient - High fixed charges may not be feasible for some
customer classes
56Summary
- Being diligent on figuring out all variable costs
reduces the fixed cost recovery burden - Getting prices aligned with marginal cost is more
important for classes with greater price
responsiveness, which also tend to be the
competitive at-risk customers - Foundation of a Foundation
57- QUESTIONS AND COMMENTS
- kelly_at_CAEnergy.com