Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:392Hits:19947919Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID094402
Title ProperPost-neoliberal electricity market 're-reforms' in Argentinax
Other Title Informationdiverging from market prescriptions
LanguageENG
AuthorHaselip, James ;  Potter, Clive
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper focuses upon the policy and institutional change that has taken place within the Argentine electricity market since the country's economic and social crisis of 2001/2. As one of the first less developed countries (LDCs) to liberalise and privatise its electricity industry, Argentina has since moved away from the orthodox market model after consumer prices were frozen by the Government in early 2002 when the national currency was devalued by 70%. Although its reforms were widely praised during the 1990s, the electricity market has undergone a number of interventions, ostensibly to keep consumer prices low and to avert the much-discussed energy 'crisis' caused by a dearth of new investment combined with rising demand levels. This paper explores how the economic crisis and its consequences have both enabled and legitimised these policy and institutional amendments, while drawing upon the specifics of the post-neoliberal market 're-reforms' to consider the extent to which the Government appears to be moving away from market-based prescriptions. In addition, this paper contributes to sector-specific understandings of how, despite these changes, neoliberal ideas and assumptions continue to dominate Argentine public policy well beyond the postcrisis era.
`In' analytical NoteEnergy Policy Vol. 38, No. 2; Feb 2010: p1168-1176
Journal SourceEnergy Policy Vol. 38, No. 2; Feb 2010: p1168-1176
Key WordsArgentina ;  Electricity ;  Privatisation