Title: Deregulation and R&D in Network Industries: The Case of the Electricity Industry
Authors: Jamasb, Tooraj
Pollitt, Michael G
Issue Date: 14-Mar-2006
Abstract: Electricity reform has coincided with a significant decline in energy R&D activities. Technical progress is crucial for tackling many energy and environmental issues as well as for long-term efficiency improvement. This paper reviews the industrial organisation literature on innovation to explore the causes of this decline, and shows that it was predicted by the pre-reform literature. More recent evidence endorses this conclusion. At the same time, R&D productivity and innovative output appear to have improved in both electric utilities and equipment suppliers, in line with general improvements in the operating efficiency of the sector. Despite this, a lasting decline in basic R&D and innovation input into basic research may negatively affect development of radical technological innovation in the long run. There is a need for reorientation of energy technology policies and spending toward more basic research, engaging more firms in R&D, encouraging collaborative research, and exploring public private partnerships.
URI: http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/131602
Appears in Collections:Cambridge Working Papers in Economics

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