Essays on the determinants and the efficiency of the public utilies’ tarification : an approach to the French drinking water sector evolutions

Thesis: The present thesis proposes a theoretical and empirical study of the determinants of the pricing of public services and their conditions of effectiveness. Taking into account environmental and social issues, the deployment of smart grids and the strong constraint on cost control have led to the implementation of new pricing and organizational practices in public services. This thesis proposes three essays devoted to the impact of these new practices in drinking water in France. First, we analyze the transition from an affine tariff to a progressive tariff on the behavior of consumers of drinking water, starting from a natural experiment conducted in Dunkerque. A first result indicates that demand has decreased with this new tariff, while creating distortions. A second result indicates that the consumer reaction to the price signal has been ambivalent. This work suggests to rethink the tariff design and the accompaniment of the consumers in their choices to limit the cognitive biases. In a second step, we analyze how the local political organization (in France, the level of the single municipality, the union of communes (Syndicats) or super-municipality (communauté de communes) and the management mode (public or private) can influence the performance of the public service. The impact of these organizational configurations on costs has never been studied simultaneously by the literature. We first propose a theoretical model to analyze them together. Then, from a panel of French water services, we observe empirically that these different organizational combinations have an impact on the price.

Author(s)

Alexandre Mayol

Date of publication
  • 2017
Keywords
  • Monopoly
  • Tariff
  • Public utility
  • Industrial organization
  • Drinking water
  • Public policy
  • Common agency
  • Microecocomics
Issuing body(s)
  • Université Panthéon-Sorbonne – Paris I
Date of defense
  • 14/11/2017
Thesis director(s)
  • Carine Staropoli
Version
  • 1