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ELECTRICITY SECTOR REFORM (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   166470


Sector reforms and institutional corruption: evidence from electricity industry in Sub-Saharan Africa / Imam, Mahmud I   Journal Article
Imam, Mahmud I Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In order to reduce the influence of corruption on electricity sector performance, most Sub-Saharan African countries have implemented electricity sector reforms. However, after nearly two and half decades of reforms, there is no evidence whether the reforms have mitigated corruption. Neither is there evidence of performance improvement of the reforms in terms of technical, economic or welfare impact. This paper aims to fill this gap. We use a dynamic panel estimator with a novel panel data of 47 Sub-Saharan African countries from 2002 to 2013. We analyse the impact of corruption and two key aspects of electricity reforms – creations of independent regulatory agencies and private sector participation – on three key performance indicators: technical efficiency, access to electricity and income. We find that corruption can significantly reduce technical efficiency of the sector and constrain the efforts to increase access to electricity and national income. The adverse effects are reduced where independent regulatory agencies are established and privatisation is implemented. These findings suggest that well-designed reforms not only boost the performance of the sector directly, but also indirectly reduce the negative effects of macro level institutional deficiencies such as corruption on micro and macro performance indicators.
Key Words Corruption  Sub-Saharan Africa  Panel Data  Dynamic  GMM  Electricity Sector Reform 
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2
ID:   185694


Strides for aberrations: the Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2021 of India / Shameem, Mohammed; Chittedi, Krishna Reddy   Journal Article
Shameem, Mohammed Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The article evaluates the provisions of the newly introduced Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2021 by the government of India. As a holistic reform package for the electricity sector is coming after a long time, the bill deserves scrutiny regards its merits and other issues raised by various stakeholders. This article is an attempt to assess the bill with a focus on its implications for India's electricity sector. It examines the major features in the bill including the Renewable Purchase Obligation (RPO), the establishment of ECEA, enhanced payment security mechanism, the distribution Sublicense model, and the reforms in electricity pricing and subsidy system in the country. The repercussions of revamps in electricity pricing and subsidy system on farming communities and free electricity programs in many states incited opposition from stakeholders. It is found that the bill attempts to trespass the limits of the quasi-federal system in India, where it affects certain privileges of the state governments. The paper concludes that persisting crisis in the operations of the current regulatory paradigm in the electricity sector deserves a comprehensive renovation, but the abortive approach of the Bill on certain critical issues of the sector needs to be addressed.
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