Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (1 online resource (30 p.))
Edition:
Online-Ausg. World Bank E-Library Archive
Parallel Title:
Estache, Antonio Utilities Reforms And Corruption In Developing Countries
Keywords:
Data
;
Data Analysis
;
Databases
;
E-Business
;
Electricity
;
Energy
;
Energy Production and Transportation
;
ICT Policy and Strategies
;
Information
;
Information and Communication Technologies
;
Infrastructure Economics and Finance
;
Infrastructure Regulation
;
International Telecommunications
;
Mobile Phones
;
Performance
;
Performance Indicators
;
Poverty Monitoring and Analysis
;
Poverty Reduction
;
Price
;
Prices
;
Private Sector Development
;
Private Security
;
Public Sector Corruption and Anticorruption Measures
;
Social Development
;
Town Water Supply
;
Water Supply and Sanitation
;
Data
;
Data Analysis
;
Databases
;
E-Business
;
Electricity
;
Energy
;
Energy Production and Transportation
;
ICT Policy and Strategies
;
Information
;
Information and Communication Technologies
;
Infrastructure Economics and Finance
;
Infrastructure Regulation
;
International Telecommunications
;
Mobile Phones
;
Performance
;
Performance Indicators
;
Poverty Monitoring and Analysis
;
Poverty Reduction
;
Price
;
Prices
;
Private Sector Development
;
Private Security
;
Public Sector Corruption and Anticorruption Measures
;
Social Development
;
Town Water Supply
;
Water Supply and Sanitation
;
Data
;
Data Analysis
;
Databases
;
E-Business
;
Electricity
;
Energy
;
Energy Production and Transportation
;
ICT Policy and Strategies
;
Information
;
Information and Communication Technologies
;
Infrastructure Economics and Finance
;
Infrastructure Regulation
;
International Telecommunications
;
Mobile Phones
;
Performance
;
Performance Indicators
;
Poverty Monitoring and Analysis
;
Poverty Reduction
;
Price
;
Prices
;
Private Sector Development
;
Private Security
;
Public Sector Corruption and Anticorruption Measures
;
Social Development
;
Town Water Supply
;
Water Supply and Sanitation
Abstract:
This paper shows empirically that "privatization" in the energy, telecommunications, and water sectors, and the introduction of independent regulators in those sectors, have not always had the expected effects on access, affordability, or quality of services. It also shows that corruption leads to adjustments in the quantity, quality, and price of services consistent with the profit-maximizing behavior that one would expect from monopolies in the sector. The results suggest that privatization and the introduction of independent regulators have, at best, only partial effects on the consequences of corruption for access, affordability, and quality of utility services
URL:
Volltext
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