• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Chapter 27 Recent Developments in the Theory of Regulation
  • Contributor: Armstrong, Mark [VerfasserIn]; Sappington, David E.M. [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: 2007
  • Published in: Handbook of industrial organization ; (2007), Seite 1557-1700
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1016/S1573-448X(06)03027-5
  • ISBN: 9780080551845; 008055184X; 0444824359; 9780444824356
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Regulation ; Monopoly ; Asymmetric information ; Liberalization
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: This chapter reviews recent theoretical work on the design of regulatory policy, focusing on the complications that arise when regulated suppliers have better information about the regulated industry than do regulators. The discussion begins by characterizing the optimal regulation of a monopoly supplier that is better informed than the regulator about its production cost and/or consumer demand for its product. Both adverse selection (“hidden information”) and moral hazard (“hidden action”) complications are considered, as are the additional concerns that arise when the regulator's intertemporal commitment powers are limited. The chapter then analyzes the design of practical policies, such as price cap regulation, that are often observed in practice. The design of regulatory policy in the presence of limited competitive forces also is reviewed. Yardstick regulation, procedures for awarding monopoly franchises, and optimal industry structuring are analyzed. The chapter also analyzes the optimal pricing of access to bottleneck production facilities in vertically-related industries, stressing the complications that arise when the owner of the bottleneck facility also operates as a retail producer.