Evaluating the free market by comparing it to the alternatives (We don't need more regulations, We don't need more price controls, No Socialism in the courtroom, Hey, White House, leave us all alone)
Tuesday, March 2, 2021
Texas Electricity Prices Are Lower Due to Deregulation
Thomas L. Hogan. Thomas L. Hogan, Ph.D., is a senior research fellow at AIER. He was formerly the chief economist for the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.
"The deregulation of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)
region has been held up as a model for electrical utility reform. As
economist Jay Zarnikau describes,
ERCOT “is generally considered to be the most successful of the
restructured retail electricity markets in North America.” Yet recent
weather-induced blackouts and anticipated price increases are causing
many to question whether deregulation has benefited Texas consumers.
In a recent Wall Street Journal article, Tom McGinty and Scott Patterson argue
that deregulation of electricity markets in Texas has resulted in
higher prices. Since average prices were higher in competitive regions,
the authors conclude that residential customers in deregulated markets
“paid more for electricity than state residents who are served by
traditional utilities.”
Unfortunately, this conclusion is highly misleading since the authors
do not consider changes in electricity prices over time, nonresidential
prices, or differences in costs of production.
The Texas state congress passed legislation in 1995 and 1999 to allow
greater competition in the ERCOT region. Electric providers were given
the choice to either open their local markets to competition or remain
as municipal utilities. Consumers in competitive regions were allowed to
choose their own electricity providers beginning in 2002. A set of
transitional guidelines was established and then phased out by 2005.
What has happened to retail market prices since that time? Economists
Peter Hartley, Kenneth Medlock, and Olivera Jankovska address this
question in a 2019 article in the journal Energy Economics.
They study electricity prices in Texas from 2002 through 2016. The
authors find that prices in competitive markets declined over the period
and became more closely related to the costs of production, while
prices in noncompetitive markets did not.
Figure 1 shows the changes in average electricity prices in the
thirteen Texas regions from 2002 to 2016. Since deregulation began,
average prices have fallen in every competitive market. They have
increased in every noncompetitive market.
Figure 1: Changes in average electricity prices, 2002-2016
Source: Harley, Medlock, and Jankovska (2019, p.7, table 1)
This pattern can be seen in the data used by McGinty and Patterson.
From 2004 through 2019, their charts show that average prices in
competitive markets were higher than those of traditional utilities but
that the difference has declined over time. The premium peaked in 2006
and fell through 2017, although the gap has widened since.
McGinty and Patterson cite this premium as evidence that competition
has caused higher prices. However, it actually shows the opposite. It
shows that the regions that later became competitive markets had high
historical prices back in 2004, before competition was fully allowed.
What caused prices to be higher in those regions? For starters, they
may have higher costs of production. One example is the regional
difference in employee wages. Another is the wholesale price of
electricity, the price at which a power company can buy electricity
rather than producing itself. The increase in competitive retail prices
from 2002 to the peak in 2006 appears to be strongly related to the
increase in wholesale prices over the same period.
Using econometric analysis, Hartley, Medlock, and Jankovska control
for cost-related factors such as regional wages and wholesale prices.
They find that these factors are important determinants of electricity
prices in competitive markets but not in noncompetitive markets. This
evidence is consistent with the theory that high prices in 2004 were
caused by production costs and were not related to deregulation.
Accounting for these factors, the authors find statistically significant decreases
in electricity prices in all five competitive markets after 2007. In
noncompetitive regions, prices decreased in only one of the eight, were
not statistically affected in four regions, and increased in
three regions. The evidence shows that deregulation has reduced prices
in competitive markets, while prices in noncompetitive markets are
mostly the same or higher.
Focusing on residential prices, McGinty and Patterson also claim that
over the period from 2004 through 2019, average competitive prices in
Texas were higher than the national average. Again, this statistic is
misleading due to the long time period, which includes years before
competition became effective, and ignores the decline in prices over
time. Yes, competitive residential prices in Texas were above the
national average in the early 2000s. But they have now been below the
national average for more than a decade.
In addition, McGinty and Patterson ignore commercial prices, which,
like residential prices, have declined due to deregulation. Commercial
electricity prices in Texas have been lower in competitive than
noncompetitive markets since 2010 and below the national average since
2009.
Contrary to McGinty and Patterson, a close look at the evidence
reveals that deregulation and competition have, in fact, reduced
electricity prices in Texas. Prices in competitive markets have fallen,
while those of noncompetitive utilities have increased. Competition has
brought both residential and commercial prices down below the national
averages."
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