Econ 206(A) Tutorial 9 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Econ 206(A) Tutorial 9

Description:

Allowing firms to compete in the contestable market (i.e. electricity/phone retail) Rail Provision in the UK Track maintenance etc (Network Rail) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: Author409
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Econ 206(A) Tutorial 9


1
Econ 206(A) Tutorial 9
  • Government and Private Provision

2
Private vs Public Ownership
  • Some Key questions
  • Are private firms always more efficient than
    public (government owned) firms?
  • For some goods/services are there objectives
    other than efficiency to consider?
  • Are their some goods/services that the private
    sector will not provide?

3
Government Provision
  • Why does the government provide
  • Education
  • Health
  • Defence

4
Private vs Public Ownership
  • Issues
  • The private sector may not provide efficient
    provision in the presence of externalities,
    public goods (or credit constraints)
  • What about equity and/or providing basic levels
    of service?
  • How should monopolies be dealt with?

5
Government Intervention
  • A key question is when should the
  • government should intervene and how
  • Government provision (state ownership)
  • Regulation
  • Contestability (splitting contestable markets
    from natural monopolies).

6
Nationalisation
  • Government provision can occur through
  • The nationalisation of a private firm.
  • or they may set up providers in an existing
    market (education for instance).
  • Many nationalisations have occurred in the UK
  • including
  • BBC (1927)
  • British Airways (1939)
  • Rolls Royce (1971 then privatised in 1973
    1987) British Leyland (1976 privatised 1986)

7
Privatisation
  • Many previously nationalised firms.
  • British Gas, British Telecom
  • British Rail
  • Water utility companies.

8
Privatisation
  • Often a firm is privatised along with the whole
    industry (i.e. barriers to entry are removed and
    new entrants are allowed).
  • For instance British Gas was privatised (through
    the sale of equity to the public), and a number
    of other firms were allowed to sell gas to
    customers.
  • So we move from a government monopoly to a wholly
    private more competitive market.
  • Note this can happen without privatisation (think
    ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5, but BBC remains
    state owned).

9
Monopoly
  • Is a private monopoly necessarily more efficient
    than a state-owned monopoly?
  • Could it be in the public interest to provide
    higher output at a lower cost?

10
Contestability
  • The monopoly component of production can (in
    theory) be reduced by
  • splitting the natural monopoly component (think
    phone line provision and maintenance or
    electricity generation) from a contestable
    component.
  • Allowing firms to compete in the contestable
    market (i.e. electricity/phone retail)

11
Rail Provision in the UK
  • Track maintenance etc (Network Rail) split from
    the contestable element of running trains
  • However not appropriate for train providers to
    compete against each other on same line.
  • So firms have some monopoly rights for a period
    after which it is put up for tender (Virgin just
    lost Penzance to Aberdeen line)
  • If firms have not performed satisfactorily they
    are less likely to regain the monopoly rights (or
    get a new line).
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com