Deregulation and Its Discontents: Rewriting the Rules in AsiaM. Ramesh, Michael Howlett Edward Elgar Publishing, 2006 M01 1 - 264 pages . . . an extremely interesting collection, full of insights and institutional detail. . . The book definitely deserves the attention of those interested in one of the most debated issues of the last 20 years in economics and political science. Herb Thomps |
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Page viii
... renewable generation costs 139 7.4 Philippine renewable energy targets in MW 140 7.5 Renewable SPPs , 1994–2003 142 7.6 DSM scenarios in Thailand after ESI deregulation 8.1 Demographic projections in selected Asian countries 9.1 Capital ...
... renewable generation costs 139 7.4 Philippine renewable energy targets in MW 140 7.5 Renewable SPPs , 1994–2003 142 7.6 DSM scenarios in Thailand after ESI deregulation 8.1 Demographic projections in selected Asian countries 9.1 Capital ...
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Contents
1 | |
11 | |
13 | |
race to the bottom top and middle | 29 |
cases in East Asian regulatory reform | 47 |
electricity refoms in Eastern Europe and Central Asia | 49 |
5 Privatization and regulation of competition in the electricity sector | 80 |
6 Independent power producers in Indonesia and the Philippines | 109 |
8 Governance and regulation of provident and pension funds in Asia | 151 |
9 Regulation and deregulation of the stock market in India | 168 |
PART III Policy design pinciples for reulatory reform | 193 |
10 Design principles for smart reglations | 195 |
11 Universal service and the transition from state control to statemonitored competition | 212 |
the dereregulatory cycle learning and spillover effects in regulatory policymaking | 228 |
Index | 237 |
evidence from the Philippines and Thailand | 124 |
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Common terms and phrases
agencies air pollution Armenia Asian countries Asian financial crisis auction Australia Azerbaijan Bottom quintile capacity capital markets Central Asia CO2 emissions competition consumers deregulation developing countries East Asia economic economies of scope effective EGAT electricity market electricity sector electricity supply industry energy efficiency Energy Policy environment example firms framework Georgia global globalisation Gunningham Hira household impact improve incentives increase India Indonesia infrastructure institutions instruments interest investment investors issues Kazakhstan Lampietti licence Malaysia milestones Moldova monopoly natural gas Newbery obligations participation pension funds percent Philippines Political Economy pressure private sector privatisation projects provident and pension Public Policy reduce region regulation regulatory renewable energy requirements response restructuring role schemes Sebi self-regulation share Singapore social Sri Lanka standards state-owned electricity companies Strategic Management Journal strategies subsidies tariffs telecommunications Thailand Top quintile trading University Press utilities Washington World Bank
Popular passages
Page 90 - UK's carbon dioxide emissions — the main contributor to global warming — by some 60 per cent by about 2050, as recommended by the RCEP, with real progress by 2020; • to maintain the reliability of energy supplies; • to promote competitive markets in the UK and beyond, helping to raise the rate of sustainable economic growth and to improve our productivity; and • to ensure that every home is adequately and affordably heated, (p.
Page 102 - North himself has given of them: institutions are the humanly devised constraints that structure political, economic and social interaction. They consist of both informal constraints (sanctions, taboos, customs, traditions, and codes of conduct), and formal rules (constitutions, laws, property rights).
Page 7 - LM Salamon, ed., Beyond Privatization: The Tools of Government Action (Washington.
Page 2 - a process or activity in which government requires or proscribes certain activities or behaviour on the part of individuals and institutions, mostly private but sometimes public, and does so through a continuing administrative process, generally through specially designated regulatory agencies
Page 68 - Income transfers tend to be well targeted in countries with less than 10 percent of the population below the poverty line...
Page 44 - Kagan (eds) Dynamics of Regulatory Change: How Globalization Affects National Regulatory Policies, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, http://repositories.cdlib.org/uciaspubs/editedvolumes/l/9.
Page 108 - Hitt, MA (2000). Privatization and entrepreneurial transformation: Emerging issues and a future research agenda. Academy of Management Review, 25, 509-52^ Zahra, SA, Ireland.
Page 122 - Privatization and Utility Regulation in Developing Countries: the Lessons So Far', Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics, 70 (4), 549-87.
Page x - He currently holds Professorial Research appointments in the Regulatory Institutions Network, Research School of Social Sciences, and in the School of Resources, Environment and Society, at the Australian National University.