1. The European Natural Gas Market Reforms Revisited: Differentiating between Regulatory Output and Outcome
- Author
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Nicole Herweg, Stefan Wurster, and Kathrin Dümig
- Subjects
Natural gas prices ,gas prices ,business.industry ,020209 energy ,General Social Sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,International economics ,Outcome (game theory) ,Energy policy ,ddc ,lcsh:Social Sciences ,lcsh:H ,Competition (economics) ,Market structure ,Lead (geology) ,Natural gas ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Economics ,business ,energy policy ,European public policy - Abstract
The article addresses the question of how successful the European natural gas reforms of 1998, 2003, and 2009 have been in terms of increasing competition in the sector. We argue that regulatory provisions are policy output variables, which as such do not affect competition directly. However, successful reforms can have an impact on the market structure, which might lead to increased competition and price reductions. Thus, it is pivotal to differentiate between policy output and outcome variables. Therefore, we first conduct a cross-sectional analysis of the regulatory impact on the market structure. Second, we apply error-correction models to test whether changes in the market structure affected the price development. Our findings suggest that the market reforms were successful in terms of liberalizing the sector, whereas the market structure did not affect the natural gas prices. Thus, we see a “successful failure” of the European natural gas market reforms.
- Published
- 2018
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