One of the main elements of the recent reform of electricity trading in the United Kingdom is the change from a uniform price auction in the wholesale market to discriminatory pricing. We analyze this change under two polar market structures (perfectly competitive and monopolistic supply), with demand uncertainty. We find that under perfect competition there is a trade-off between efficiency and consumer surplus between the two auction rules. We also establish that a move from uniform to discriminatory pricing under monopoly conditions has a negative impact on profits and output (weakly), a positive impact on consumer surplus, and ambiguous implications for welfare and average prices. Copyright 2003 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
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Volume (Year): 24 (2003) Issue (Month): 2 (September) Pages: 175-211 Download reference. The following formats are available: HTML
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Natalia Fabra & Nils-Henrik von der Fehr & David Harbord, 2002.
"Designing Electricity Auctions,"
Microeconomics
0211017, EconWPA, revised 31 Aug 2003.
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