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Chile's experience shows that it is possible to design direct subsidies (such as Chile's subsidy for potable drinking water) at relatively low cost to the state and without distorting poor people's behavior. Prices have fallen substantially in services that new operators have entered, showing that regulation is a poor substitute for competition.Serra analyzes subsidies in Chile's public utilities. Over the last decade, especially, significant efforts have been made to extend public services to rural populations. An explicit consumption subsidy for potable water (targeted to the poorest 20 percent of the population) currently benefits 17 percent of the population.Cross-subsidies have been virtually eliminated in Chile, and existing subsidies are funded from the national budget. The elimination of cross-subsidies has facilitated competition in some services. Prices have fallen substantially in services that new operators have entered, showing that regulation is a poor substitute for competition.The Chilean experience shows that it is possible to design direct subsidies (such as the one for drinking water) at relatively low cost to the state. Moreover, putting rural infrastructure projects out to public tender whenever possible has allowed substantial reductions in government spending.Chile's experience also shows that it is possible to use subsidies that do not distort people's behavior - by making sure that they perceive the marginal cost of providing the service. In rural areas it is advisable to introduce consumption subsidies with an upper limit on the amount subsidized, so that when a family consumes more than the subsidized amount, it perceives at the margin the total cost of providing the service.In rural zones where there is no infrastructure, investment needs to be subsidized. Users do not pay the long-run marginal cost, but it is important that the rate charged at least cover the short-term marginal cost. In other words, rural utility charges are required to cover the system's operating costs.For those who argue that the poor would be better off with cash transfers (choosing their own consumption baskets), Serra outlines the arguments for subsidizing utilities, beyond the moral value of giving the poor access to public services considered basic for existence.This paper - a product of Governance, Regulation, and Finance, World Bank Institute - is part of a larger effort in the institute to increase understanding of infrastructure regulation.

Detail Book of Subsidies in Chilean Public Utilities PDF

Subsidies in Chilean Public Utilities
  • Author : Pablo Serra
  • Release : 30 September 2024
  • Publisher : Unknown
  • ISBN : OCLC:1290704932
  • Genre : Uncategoriezed
  • Total Page : 45 pages
  • Language : English
  • PDF File Size : 7,6 Mb

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