Infrastructure performance and reform in developing and transition economies : evidence from a survey of productivity measures /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Estache, Antonio.
Imprint:Washington, D.C. : World Bank, Infrastructure Network, Office of the Vice President, 2005.
Description:27 p. ; 28 cm.
Language:English
Series:Policy research working paper ; 3514
Policy research working papers ; 3514.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/5602530
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Trujillo, Lourdes.
Perelman, Sergio.
World Bank. Infrastructure Network. Office of the Vice President.
Notes:"February 2005."
Includes bibliographical references (p. 23-27).
Also available on the World Wide Web.
Summary:Estache, Perelman, and Trujillo review about 80 studies on electricity and gas, water and sanitation, and rail and ports (with a footnote on telecommunications) in developing countries. The main policy lesson is that there is a difference in the relevance of ownership for efficiency between utilities and transport in developing countries. In transport, private operators have tended to perform better than public operators. For utilities, ownership often does not matter as much as sometimes argued. Most cross-country studies find no statistically significant difference in efficiency scores between public and private providers. As for the country-specific studies, some do find differences in performance over time but these differences tend to matter much less than a large number of other variables. Across sectors, private operators functioning in a competitive environment or regulated under price caps or hybrid regulatory regimes tend to catch up best practice faster than public operators. There is a very strong case to push regulators in developing and transition economies toward a more systematic reliance on yardstick competition in a sector in which residual monopoly powers tend to be common. This paper--a product of the Office of the Vice President, Infrastructure Network--is part of a larger effort in the network to document the state of the sector.

MARC

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520 3 |a Estache, Perelman, and Trujillo review about 80 studies on electricity and gas, water and sanitation, and rail and ports (with a footnote on telecommunications) in developing countries. The main policy lesson is that there is a difference in the relevance of ownership for efficiency between utilities and transport in developing countries. In transport, private operators have tended to perform better than public operators. For utilities, ownership often does not matter as much as sometimes argued. Most cross-country studies find no statistically significant difference in efficiency scores between public and private providers. As for the country-specific studies, some do find differences in performance over time but these differences tend to matter much less than a large number of other variables. Across sectors, private operators functioning in a competitive environment or regulated under price caps or hybrid regulatory regimes tend to catch up best practice faster than public operators. There is a very strong case to push regulators in developing and transition economies toward a more systematic reliance on yardstick competition in a sector in which residual monopoly powers tend to be common. This paper--a product of the Office of the Vice President, Infrastructure Network--is part of a larger effort in the network to document the state of the sector. 
530 |a Also available on the World Wide Web. 
650 0 |a Infrastructure (Economics)  |z Developing countries  |v Case studies. 
650 0 |a Industrial productivity  |z Developing countries  |v Case studies. 
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