Cost of Power Outages for Manufacturing Firms in Ethiopia: A Stated Preference Study
Sammanfattning
Having a reliable supply of electricity is essential for the operation of any firm. In most developing countries, however, electricity supply is highly unreliable. In this study, we estimate the cost of power outages for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, using a stated preference survey. We find that the willingness to pay, and thus the cost of power outages, is substantial. The estimated willingness to pay for a reduction of one power outage corresponds to a tariff increase of 16 percent. The willingness to pay for reducing the average length of a power outage by one hour corresponds to a 33 percent increase. The compensating variation for a zero-outage situation corresponds to about three times the current electricity cost. There is, however, considerable heterogeneity in costs across sectors, firm sizes, and levels of electricity consumption. Policy makers could consider this observed heterogeneity when it comes to aspects such as where to invest to improve reliability and different types of electricity contracts.
Övrig beskrivning
JEL:D22, Q41
Samlingar
Fil(er)
Datum
2018-05Författare
Carlsson, Fredrik
Demeke, Eyoual
Martinsson, Peter
Tesemma, Tewodros
Nyckelord
power outages
willingness to pay
choice experiment
Ethiopia
Publikationstyp
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers in Economics
731
Språk
eng