Take Action

Home | Faculty & Research Overview | Research

Research Details

Career Concerns, Inaction and Market Inefficiency: Evidence From Utility Regulation, Journal of Industrial Economics

Abstract

Regulators and firms often use incentive schemes to attract skillful agents and to induce them to put forth effort in pursuit of the principal's goals. Incentive schemes that reward skill and effort, however, may also punish agents for adverse outcomes beyond their control. As a result, such schemes may induce inefficient behavior, as agents try to avoid actions that might make it easier to directly associate a bad outcome with their decisions. In this paper, we study how such caution on the part of individual agents may lead to inefficient market outcomes, focusing on the context of natural gas procurement by regulated public utilities. We posit that a regulated natural gas distribution company may, due to regulatory incentives, engage in excessively cautious behavior by foregoing surplusincreasing gas trades that could be seen ex post as having caused supply curtailments to its customers. We derive testable implications of such behavior and show that the theory is supported empirically in ways that cannot be explained by conventional price risk aversion or other explanations. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the reduction in efficient trade caused by the regulatory mechanism is most severe during periods of relatively high demand and low supply, when the benefits of trade would be greatest

Type

Article

Author(s)

Severin Borenstein, Meghan Busse, Ryan Kellogg

Date Published

2012

Citations

Borenstein, Severin, Meghan Busse, and Ryan Kellogg. 2012. Career Concerns, Inaction and Market Inefficiency: Evidence From Utility Regulation. Journal of Industrial Economics.(2): 220-248.

KELLOGG INSIGHT

Explore leading research and ideas

Find articles, podcast episodes, and videos that spark ideas in lifelong learners, and inspire those looking to advance in their careers.
learn more

COURSE CATALOG

Review Courses & Schedules

Access information about specific courses and their schedules by viewing the interactive course scheduler tool.
LEARN MORE

DEGREE PROGRAMS

Discover the path to your goals

Whether you choose our Full-Time, Part-Time or Executive MBA program, you’ll enjoy the same unparalleled education, exceptional faculty and distinctive culture.
learn more