Effective Rate Design

Deck: 

Two by Four, not a Nudge

Fortnightly Magazine - December 2016
This full article is only accessible by current license holders. Please login to view the full content.
Don't have a license yet? Click here to sign up for Public Utilities Fortnightly, and gain access to the entire Fortnightly article database online.

Last month I stressed this neo-classical economic public interest goal of rate design. Set efficient price signals. Then adjust them based upon constraints of revenue requirements and secondary goals of saving the environment, stimulating the economy, making electricity affordable, etc.

Efficiency is paramount. This is true. However, those of us who have suffered through Econ 101 might think that there is a precise equilibrium price that creates an optimally efficient market.

Some might think that tweaking rates is all that is needed. This is false. Effective rate design must get customers’ attention. It is not a precise science that should be constrained by gradualism.

We sense things about electric consumers’ behavior. People don’t change their consumption patterns or levels because of small changes in prices. They need a real kick in the pants.

At least by ten percent in my experience, from selling competitive retail electric services.

It takes time for people to adapt to new rate designs. Busy people don’t get excited by a change that moves their cost of electricity from two dollars and fifty cents to two dollars and sixty cents per day.

And lags between consumption and billing break the link between price and consumption.

This full article is only accessible by current license holders. Please login to view the full content.
Don't have a license yet? Click here to sign up for Public Utilities Fortnightly, and gain access to the entire Fortnightly article database online.