Political institutions of electricity regulation: The case of Turkey

Political institutions of electricity regulation: The case of Turkey

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Article ID: iaor20117705
Volume: 39
Issue: 9
Start Page Number: 5578
End Page Number: 5587
Publication Date: Sep 2011
Journal: Energy Policy
Authors:
Keywords: government, economics
Abstract:

Turkey has been going through a liberalization process in its electricity market over the last decade. So far, the regulatory content of the market reforms has been in the center of attention in the literature, to the negligence of regulatory governance. However, recent studies, which applied the theoretical insights of new institutional economics to utilities regulation, have demonstrated that political endowments of the country draw the boundaries to which extent such regulatory content can be effectively implemented. In line with these studies, this paper adopts an institutional approach and attempts to identify the political endowments of Turkey in order to further analyze whether the market reforms succeeded in bringing about sufficient checks to cure the institutional problems. In other words, the paper takes a picture of the overall regulatory arena. The results show that the current regulatory structure, especially government–regulator relations, yet fails to meet good regulatory governance criteria. The paper also provides some policy suggestions.

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