Show simple item record

dc.contributor.authorJouravlev, Andrei
dc.contributor.authorLee, Terence R.
dc.date.accessioned2014-01-03T00:34:55Z
dc.date.available2014-01-03T00:34:55Z
dc.date.issued1997-09-25
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11362/31665
dc.descriptionIncludes bibliography
dc.description.abstractAbstract Since the 1970's, the governments of the region have been transferring, in one form or another, public companies and other state institutions to the private sector. Privatization has now extended to all sectors of the economy, including water-related public utilities. Private sector involvement in the provision of water-related goods and services offers potentially significant efficiency gains. It will not, in itself, guarantee lasting welfare improvement unless there is a competitive market. If not, results will depend on the regime of regulation in which the industries operate. The effectiveness of this regime is determined by the ability of governments to find and create adequate institutional and regulatory conditions that oblige supplies of water-related goods and services to be efficient and responsive to the needs of their customers. Monopoly regulation includes structure regulation, which determines which organizations or types of organizations can engage in which activities, and conduct or behavioral regulation, which concerns the permitted behaviour of organizations in their chosen activities. This paper outlines the principles believed to be essential in formulating an adequate regulatory framework for the water sector. Its focus is on the issues to be confronted in developing a regulatory structure for water-related public utilities. It reviews a vast body of recent literature on economic regulation and private sector participation in the provision of water-related goods and services as well as the experience of the countries where privatization and regulatory reforms have advanced most. Emphasis is given to the regulation of prices, product and service quality, investments and quantity. The alternative means of overcoming the problems of asymmetric information between regulator and regulated firms, the limited commitment powers of governments and regulators, conflicts between regulators with different mandates, government failure and regulatory capture are also discussed, as are the possibilities of introducing competition and facilitating regulation through changes in the industrial structure, including horizontal and vertical restructuring.
dc.format.extent115 páginas.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherECLAC
dc.titleRegulation of the private provision of public water-related services
dc.typeTexto
dc.contributor.entityNU. CEPAL. División de Medio Ambiente y Desarrollo
dc.divisionDivisión de Desarrollo Sostenible y Asentamientos Humanos
dc.divisionoldDivisión de Medio Ambiente y Desarrollo
dc.publicationstatusDisponible
dc.regionalofficeSantiago
dc.physicaldescription115 p. : diagrs., tabls.
dc.jobnumberS979800 E
dc.jobnumberS974340 E
dc.callnumberLC/R.1635/Rev.1
dc.identifier.unsymbolLC/R.1635/REV.1
dc.placeofeditionSantiago
dc.subject.spanishABASTECIMIENTO DE AGUA
dc.subject.spanishAGUA
dc.subject.spanishCALIDAD DEL AGUA
dc.subject.spanishCONTROLES DE PRECIOS
dc.subject.spanishORDENAMIENTO DE LAS AGUAS
dc.subject.spanishPRIVATIZACION
dc.subject.spanishREGLAS Y NORMAS
dc.subject.spanishSERVICIOS PUBLICOS
dc.subject.englishPRICE CONTROLS
dc.subject.englishPRIVATIZATION
dc.subject.englishPUBLIC SERVICES
dc.subject.englishRULES AND REGULATIONS
dc.subject.englishWATER MANAGEMENT
dc.subject.englishWATER QUALITY
dc.subject.englishWATER SUPPLY
dc.subject.englishWATER
dc.coverage.spatialspaAMERICA LATINA Y EL CARIBE
dc.coverage.spatialengLATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
dc.type.biblevelDocumento Completo
dc.doctypeDocumentos de proyectos e investigación
dc.topic.spanishPRIVATIZACIONES
dc.topic.englishPRIVATIZATIONS
dc.idsade4697
cepal.physicaldescriptiondiagramas, tablas


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record