Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5067073 | European Economic Review | 2012 | 19 Pages |
Several regulatory authorities worldwide have imposed forward contract commitments on electricity producers as a way to mitigate their market power. In this paper we analyze the impact of such commitments on equilibrium outcomes in a model that reflects important institutional and structural features of electricity markets. We show that, when firms are asymmetric, the distribution of contracts among firms matters. In the case of a single dominant firm, the regulator can be confident that allocating contracts to that firm will be pro-competitive. However, when asymmetries are less extreme, certain contract allocations might yield anti-competitive outcomes by eliminating more competitive equilibria. Our analysis thus suggests that forward contracts should be allocated so as to (virtually) reduce asymmetries across firms.
⺠We examine the impact of forward contract commitments held by electricity producers on equilibrium outcomes. ⺠When firms are asymmetric, the distribution of contracts among firms matters. ⺠Allocating contracts to a single dominant firm is pro-competitive. ⺠When asymmetries are less extreme, certain contract allocations might yield anti-competitive outcomes. ⺠Forward contracts should be allocated so as to (virtually) reduce asymmetries across firms.