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Reforming the power sector in transition: Do institutions matter?

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posted on 2024-11-14, 13:41 authored by Rabindra NepalRabindra Nepal, Tooraj Jamasb
This paper aims to investigate the often poorly explored link between power sector reforms and wider institutional reforms in the economy across different groups of transition countries. We use panel-data econometrics based on bias corrected dynamic fixed effect analysis (LSDVC) to assess the impact of reforms on macroeconomic and power sector outcomes. The results indicate that power sector reform is highly inter-dependent with wider reforms in other sectors of the economy. The findings indicate that failure to harmonize inter-sector reforms leads to power sector reform measures being ineffective. We conclude that the success of power sector reforms in developing countries largely depend on the extent to which they synchronize inter-sector reforms in the economy.

History

Citation

Nepal, R. & Jamasb, T. (2012). Reforming the power sector in transition: Do institutions matter?. Energy Economics, 34 (5), 1675-1682.

Journal title

Energy Economics

Volume

34

Issue

5

Pagination

1675-1682

Language

English

RIS ID

141227

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