« Modern food retailers and traditional markets in developing countries: Comparing quality, prices, and competition strategies in Thailand | Main | Competition in Health Care Markets »
August 29, 2011
A theoretical model of collusion and regulation in an electricity spot market
Posted by D. Daniel Sokol
Diego Escobari, The University of Texas - Pan American provides A theoretical model of collusion and regulation in an electricity spot market.
ABSTRACT: This paper presents a theoretical model of collusion and regulation in a wholesale electricity spot market. Given a demand for electricity, competing generators report their marginal costs. Then, only generators with the lowest marginal costs are selected to sell at a price equal to the marginal costs of the last generator selected to sell. The results show that under a fixed price level it is a weakly dominant strategy to truthfully report the marginal cost. Variable (or endogenous) prices create the possibility of profitable collusion among generators. With uncertainty in the marginal costs and risk neutrality, the results show that a necessary condition for collusion to be sustainable is that the marginal cost reported by the pivot (marginal generator) should be higher than the average of the true marginal costs of all the generators. The existence of collusion fines and audit probabilities were found to be effective in deterring collusion. It is also shown that more efficient generators have less incentive to collude.
August 29, 2011 | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef01543402686e970c
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference A theoretical model of collusion and regulation in an electricity spot market :
