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Page 1: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Institute for Transport StudiesFACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT

How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries

Dr Andrew Smith

Senior Lecturer in Transport Regulation and Economics

Joint appointment, Institute for Transport Studies (ITS) and LUBS Economics Division, University of Leeds

October 2012

Page 2: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Overview

Economic Regulation

Organisational and Institutional Separation

Competitive tendering

“Infrastructure” industries RPI-X modelValue for moneyResilience, sustainability

EU reforms; break up “infrastructure” and operationDecision making in fragmented industries

Competition “for the market” not “in the market”Typically applies to “operations”Does it work?

Page 3: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Economic regulation – behavioural assumptions

Key formula

Regulatory Price Change = RPI - X

Productivity Investment

• Private firms assumed to profit maximise

• Implies, minimise costs subject to output and quality

• Large incentives to cut costs by more than the X factor

Page 4: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Graphically…

Revenue (RPI-X)

ROR = 8%

ROR = 8%

5 year price control period Next control period

T=0

Cost base

P0

T=5

Costs

ROR > 8%

Page 5: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Issues

• Asymmetries of information – firms know more than the regulator

• Gives opportunities for gaming in various ways

Page 6: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Can firms hoodwink the regulator

Page 7: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Issues

• Asymmetries of information – firms know more than the regulator

• Gives opportunities for gaming in various ways

• So regulators use benchmarking…

Page 8: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Conceptual approach

• Regulator eliminates inter-company efficiency differences

Cost

Output

Cost frontier (T=0)B

.

...

.A

Step 2: frontier shift

Cost frontier (T=5)

C

DE

Step 1: catch-up

Data points can be regulated firms in same country, or different countries (or business units within a company)

Stochastic

Frontier Methods

Page 9: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Efficiency estimates for Network Rail (2008 review)

Implies a gap against the frontier of 40% in 2006

40%gap

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Sco

re a

ga

inst

fro

nti

er

Profile of Network Rail Efficiency Scores: Flexible Cuesta00 Model

Page 10: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Hierarchies (top-level and business unit managers)

Infrastructure Company

Region (sub-company)

IM1 IM2 …

R11 R21 RS1… R12 R22 RS2…

Inefficiency due to systematic differences between firms – external inefficiency

Inefficiency due variation in performance at regional level –internal inefficiency

Page 11: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Britain’s rail reform experiment

TOCs

ROSCOs

Railtrack /Network Rail

FOCs

TrackMaintenance

TrackRenewal

Train manufacture and maintenance

British Rail

Monopoly

Competition“in the market”

Competition“for the market”

Page 12: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Growth in Britain’s Train Operating Company Costs

Unit costs have stabilised since then – roughly same in 2009 as 2006

35% unit cost growth since 2000 = £1.5bn annual cost

FIGURE 1: TRAIN OPERATING COMPANY COSTS

(EXCLUDING INFRASTRUCTURE ACCESS CHARGES)

0.0

20.0

40.0

60.0

80.0

100.0

120.0

140.0

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Uni

t cos

t ind

ex: 1

997=

100

Cost

s, £

m, 2

006

pric

es

Page 13: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Projected costs of vertical separation – EVES Rail Study

Billions of Euros (2005 constant prices) Current

density

levels

Current

density

levels

+ 10%

Current

density

levels

+ 20%

Current

density

levels

+ 50%*

Yearly cost of imposing vertical

separation across EU (for those countries

not already separated)

5.8 7.8 9.6 14.5

Note: * It is recognised that higher growth would at some point require increased capacity

1 • So vertical separation may not be good for all situations

• Alternatives – Holding Company

• Or clearer, better aligned incentives – combined with alliances?

• How to model this complex system?

Page 14: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Final observations / research challenges

• The RPI-X regulatory model under strain – needs refreshing

• Incorporating and incentivising quality

• Capital bias – too much investment?

• 5 year planning - cycles in investment – leads to high cost?

• Modelling complex systems (within industries) and between industries (competing for same resources)

• Costs – climate – resilience – how much do we know?

Incentivising the “right” behaviour?

Page 15: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Contact details

Dr Andrew Smith

Senior Lecturer in Transport Regulation and EconomicsInstitute for Transport Studies (ITS) and Leeds University Business School

Tel (direct): + 44 (0) 113 34 36654

Email: [email protected]

Web site: www.its.leeds.ac.uk

Page 16: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Back-up slides

Page 17: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Stochastic frontier analysis

itittitititit uvNPYfC );,,,(

• Yit - output measures• Pit - input prices• Nit - exogenous network characteristic variables• E.g. Ln Costs =0.944Ln Track + 0.309*Ln(TRAIN/TRACK)…• τit represent time variables capturing technical change• β - parameters to be estimated. • vit- random noise term• uit- inefficiency term

Deterministic Frontier Noise Inefficiency

Page 18: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT How do organisations make decisions? The case of regulated and quasi-regulated industries Dr Andrew.

Stochastic frontier analysis: diagram

Cost

Output

Deterministic frontierFirms observed cost

Firms stochastic frontier

itv

itu