Document de travail

The "demand side" effect of price caps: uncertainty, imperfect competition, and ration

Thomas-Olivier Léautier

Résumé

Price caps are often used by policy makers to "regulate markets". Previous analyses have focussed on the "supply side" impact of these caps, and derived the optimal price cap, which maximizes investment and welfare. This article expands the analysis to include the "demand side" impact of price caps: when prices can no longer rise, customers must be rationed to adjust demand to available supply. This yields two new findings, that contradict previous analyses. First, the welfare-maximizing cap is higher than the capacity-maximizing cap, since increasing the cap increases gross surplus when customers are rationed. Second, in somes cases, the capacity-maximizing cap leads to lower capacity and welfare than no cap. These findings underscores the importance for policy makers to examine the impact on customers when they impose price caps. Keywords: price caps, imperfect competition, rationing, investment incentives

Mots-clés

price caps; imperfect competition; rationing; investment incentives;

Codes JEL

  • L13: Oligopoly and Other Imperfect Markets
  • L94: Electric Utilities

Référence

Thomas-Olivier Léautier, « The "demand side" effect of price caps: uncertainty, imperfect competition, and ration », TSE Working Paper, n° 14-460, 27 janvier 2014.

Voir aussi

Publié dans

TSE Working Paper, n° 14-460, 27 janvier 2014