1,724 research outputs found
Designing incentives in local public utilities, an international comparison of the drinking water sector.
Cross-country comparisons avoid the unsteady equilibrium in which regulators have to balance between economies of scale and a sufficient number of remaining comparable utilities. By the use of Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), we compare the efficiency of the drinking water sector in the Netherlands, England and Wales, Australia, Portugal and Belgium. After introducing a procedure to measure the homogeneity of an industry, robust order-m partial frontiers are used to detect outlying observations. By applying bootstrapping algorithms, bias-corrected first and second stage results are estimated. Our results suggest that incentive regulation in the sense of regulatory and benchmark incentive schemes have a significant positive effect on efficiency. By suitably adapting the conditional efficiency measures to the bias corrected estimates, we incorporate environmental variables directly into the efficiency estimates. We firstly equalize the social, physical and institutional environment, and secondly, deduce the effect of incentive schemes on utilities as they would work under similar conditions. The analysis demonstrates that in absence of clear and structural incentives the average efficiency of the utilities falls in comparison with utilities which are encouraged by incentives.Business; Economics; Efficiency; Management; Research; Research in economics; University; University-research; Incentives; Utilities; International; Sector;
Big and beautiful? On non-parametrically measuring scale economies in non-convex technologies.
Knowledge on the scale economies drives the incentives of regulators, governments and individual utilities to scale-up or scale-down the scale of operations. This paper considers the returns to scale (RTS) in non-convex frontier models. In particular, we evaluate RTS assumptions in a Free Disposal Hull model, which accounts for uncertainty and heterogeneity in the sample. Additionally, we provide a three-step framework to empirically analyze the existence and extent of RTS in real world applications. In a .rst step, the presence of scale (and scope) economies is veri.ed. Secondly, RTS for individual observations are examined while in a third step we derive the optimal scale for a sector as a whole. The framework is applied to the Portuguese drinking water sector where we .nd the optimal scale to be situated around 7 to 10 million m3.
Progressive or Regressive? A Second Look at the Tax Exemption for Employer Sponsored Health Insurance Premiums
Examines the argument for capping the exemption of health insurance benefits from income tax and its potential effects on those already at risk of losing their coverage. Estimates the regressive impact by firm size, location, risk group, and income level
Health Care Opinion Leaders' Views on Health Spending and Reform Implementation
Presents survey responses from healthcare experts about support for the reform law's coverage expansion provisions, payment and delivery system reforms, the budget reduction framework that relies in part on Medicare and Medicaid savings, and other issues
Health Care Opinion Leaders' Views on Priorities for the Obama Administration
Presents results of a survey of experts on priorities in healthcare reform and related economic stimulus for the Barack Obama administration, including new regulations, employer financing of coverage, and an insurance exchange with a public option
Health Care Opinion Leaders' Views on Health Reform
Presents results of a survey of healthcare experts on insurance, payment, and delivery system reforms, including a national insurance exchange with broad authority, a public plan option with a bundled payment system, and a standard benefits package
Realizing Health Reform's Potential: Small Businesses and the Affordable Care Act of 2010
Examines current coverage of workers in small firms, insurers' administrative costs, and healthcare reform provisions such as small-business tax credits to offset premiums and exemption from shared responsibility payments and the estimated impact of each
State Trends in Premiums and Deductibles, 2003-2009: How Building on the Affordable Care Act Will Help Stem the Tide of Rising Costs and Eroding Benefits
Examines 2003-09 state trends in family coverage premiums and deductibles for private employers. Looks at projected savings on premiums if the 2010 healthcare reform succeeds in slowing growth by 1 percentage point annually and weighs policy implications
Comparing soil boundaries delineated by digital analysis of multispectral scanner data from high and low spatial resolution systems
The author has identified the following significant results. Computer-aided analysis techniques used with aircraft MSS data showed that the spatial resolution was sufficient to recognize each soil mapping unit of the test site. Some difficulties occurred where different soil series were intricately mixed, and this mixture showed as a separate spectral mapping unit, or where the difference between two soils depended on the depth of silty surface material. Analysis of LANDSAT data with computer-aided techniques showed that it was not possible to find spectrally homogeneous soil features of the seven soil series on the 40 ha test site on the digital display or on a picture print map. Cluster techniques could be used on an extended test area to group spectrally similar data points into cluster classes
Resistivity scaling and electron relaxation times in metallic nanowires
We study the resistivity scaling in nanometer-sized metallic wires due to
surface roughness and grain-boundaries, currently the main cause of electron
scattering in nanoscaled interconnects. The resistivity has been obtained with
the Boltzmann transport equation, adopting the relaxation time approximation
(RTA) of the distribution function and the effective mass approximation for the
conducting electrons. The relaxation times are calculated exactly, using
Fermi's golden rule, resulting in a correct relaxation time for every sub-band
state contributing to the transport. In general, the relaxation time strongly
depends on the sub-band state, something that remained unclear with the methods
of previous work. The resistivity scaling is obtained for different roughness
and grain-boundary properties, showing large differences in scaling behavior
and relaxation times. Our model clearly indicates that the resistivity is
dominated by grain-boundary scattering, easily surpassing the surface roughness
contribution by a factor of 10.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
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