Parameters of a Demand and Price Based Strategy for Efficien
论文类型 | 基础研究 | 发表日期 | 1999-09-01 |
来源 | 21th Century Urban Water Management in China | ||
作者 | Jim,Elston | ||
摘要 | Summary of points,1. Where incomes are low and economic growth is strong, the demand for urban water increases very rapidly.2. Where the demand for water is increasing, the marginal cost of meeting the demand is increasing. In developing countries, wh |
Parameters of a Demand and Price Based Strategy for Efficient Urban Water Resource Use Jim Elston 1. Introduction and Summary Economic growth, urbanisation, and income and price relationships, have resulted in rapid growth in demand for water. This paper explains the economic principals underlying this phenomenon. Using Shijiazhuang as an example, it shows how demand responds to price and income, and how price and demand management can play a significant part in improving efficiency of water resource use and overcoming shortages. China is addressing the need to improve water pricing. Most cities have been increasing charges in recent years with a view to achieving full cost recovery. Wastewater charges have also been included in tariffs in many cities over the last two or three years. Still the charges are not at full cost recovery levels and will have to be increased further. Issues for the future More needs to be done regarding management of groundwater resources and implementation of resource fees for groundwater use. Lack of effective groundwater management is a fundamental problem to be overcome. The recent moves to improve water pricing need further determination and political will to continue to raise tariffs to achieve full cost recovery of urban water services. The process has started, it must not stop. With continued economic development and further tariff increases, the finances of water supply companies will improve. As revenue approaches cost recovery level, it is likely that there will be some conspicuous refurbishment of water supply company accommodation and facilities. Questions will start to be asked about the use of water supply revenues. There will be a need for some transparency and regulatory control to ensure the public that charges are not excessive. More will have to be done toward institutionalisation and systemisation of water pricing and price setting. Hebei could be an appropriate pilot province for implementation of an independent pricing and regulatory authority such as exists in developed countries (for example OfWat in the UK, and IPART in NSW, Australia). In the future there is likely to be greater private participation in the urban water supply and wastewater industries. Foreign investment will be a growing source of funds for construction of treatment plants and distribution systems. This will require conformity with international standards of accounting and reporting. Summary of points. 1. Where incomes are low and economic growth is strong, the demand for urban water increases very rapidly. 21. International standards of accounting and reporting should be required of Water Supply Companies and Wastewater Treatment Companies. 2. Economic Efficiency The concepts of supply and demand (marginal cost and marginal benefit) underlie the principle of economic efficiency. They form the foundation of project evaluation, comparing costs and benefits to maximise efficiency. They also form the parameters of a demand and price based strategy for efficient urban water resources management. Net benefit is at a maximum when the marginal cost and marginal benefit are equal. For a given quantity, the net benefit is the area under the demand curve less the area under the supply curve. In Figure 1 the net benefit is indicated by the area under the demand curve and above the supply curve. The optimum price, P, is where the demand curve (marginal benefit) and supply curve (marginal cost) cross over (are equal). That is to say, the optimum price is where the sale price equals the cost of supply. Prices above or below P throw supply and demand out of balance and reduce efficiency. Marginal cost increases as the quantity supplied increases. If demand is excessive the marginal cost exceeds the marginal benefit. When costs exceed benefits it is not good news for any economy. It is inefficient, inflationary, and generally inequitable. When marginal costs exceed water revenues, cost recovery is impossible and more and more subsidy is required. It is suggested that demand and price management should be used to bring marginal benefit and marginal cost more into balance, and thus achieve economic efficiency of urban water resource use. When marginal cost (the cost of supply) exceeds marginal benefit (the sale price) there is no harm, and a lot of good, in setting the marginal benefit (the sale price) at a higher level. This is something that price bureaus should bear in mind. If marginal benefit is set at a higher level, users take more care, waste and inefficiency are reduced, demand becomes more reasonable, marginal costs are reduced, supply is generally more equitable, and cost recovery improves. When incomes are increasing, all this is achieved with hardly any disadvantage to the users. 3. Water Demand and Income The demand per capita for water is determined primarily by price and income. As household incomes increase the quantity of urban water demanded increases. A poor household with one small tap and limited buckets, tubs and vessels to handle water, cannot use as much per capita per day as a wealthy household. A wealthy household may have showers, flush toilets, washing machines, dishwashers, garden sprinkler systems, fountains, swimming pool, (the list gets bigger as people get richer). The wealthy tend to wash body and clothes more often, and wash cars and paths and floors. Consumption per capita per day can be very high. As income increases, the demand curve moves to the right. This is illustrated in Figure 2. As income increases, the quantity demanded at a given price also increases. The marginal cost of meeting this increased demand (indicated by the supply curve) also increases. If the sale price is not increased, the marginal cost (the cost of supply) of meeting the increased demand would far exceed the marginal benefit (revenue). For the water supply to be sustainable, the price must increase. As income increases, demand increases. As demand increases, marginal cost increases. As marginal cost increases, price must increase to balance marginal cost and marginal benefit. When real incomes are increasing, that is income increasing faster than price inflation, the price of water must increase faster than price inflation to manage sustainable resource use. In addition to income effects influencing per capita consumption, there is the population effect. As urban population increases, total demand for water increases, thus placing further pressure on the marginal costs of supply. 4. Price and Income Elasticity of Demand Knowing that demand reduces if price increases, and that demand increases if income increases, is all very well. But, for demand management, we want some idea of how much demand will change with a change in price, and how much demand will change with a change in income. This leads us to the concept of elasticity. The term "elasticity" refers to the extent that demand responds to changes in price or income. 4.1 Responsiveness of Demand to Price Change The price elasticity of demand is the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to a change in price. Price elasticity is measured by the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price. It can be expressed by the formula The price elasticity of demand for water tends to increase as price increases. At very low prices, the responsiveness to price change is relatively small. At very low prices, demand is relatively inelastic. A 10% increase in price might only reduce demand by, say, 1%. At high prices, the demand for water is quite responsive to a change in price. At high prices, a 10% increase in price might reduce demand by 8% (this is unusual as very high prices are rarely charged for urban water supply). Commonly, where appropriate prices are being charged for urban water supply, the price elasticity is around -0.5. An indicative demand curve for domestic water supply is illustrated in Figure 3. The indicative demand curve suggests that the price elasticity of demand between 0.5 yuan/m3 and 0.75 yuan/m3 is about -0.2. The price elasticity of demand between 5 yuan/m3 and 6 yuan/m3 is about -0.65.
I use a model that has proven remarkably reliable in forecasting impacts of price and income changes on urban water demand in developing countries. Price elasticities indicated by the model, and applicable to China, at 1999 constant prices, are shown in Table 1. The price elasticities given refer to the elasticity for each 0.25 yuan/m3 increment in price. Table 1. Price elasticity of demand (1999 comparable prices)
The parameters of price elasticity for non-residential water are the same as the price elasticities for residential water. Generally the prices charged for non-residential urban water supply are higher than for residential water supply, and the responsiveness to price changes therefore tends to be higher. 4.2 Responsiveness of Demand to Income Change The income elasticity of demand is the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to a change in income. Income elasticity is measured by the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in income.
The income elasticity of demand for domestic water supply tends to diminish as household incomes increase. At very low household incomes the responsiveness of demand for water to a change in income is relatively high. A 10% increase in income might lead to an 8% increase in demand. At very high household incomes, demand is relatively income inelastic. A further 10% increase in income might increase demand by only 2%. Parameters of income elasticity of demand that appear to fit the situation in China are indicated in Table 2. Table 2. Income elasticity of demand (1999 comparable prices)
Response of non-residential demand to income is different. Industries, municipalities and commercial enterprises can consume very large amounts of water, and do consume large amounts when the price is very low. International comparisons suggest that, in large cities, where total non-residential water requirement exceeds total residential water requirement, non-residential demand is income inelastic. It does not respond to a change in income (but it does respond to price). Where total non-residential water requirements are less than total residential water requirements, there is a response to increased income and development.. 5. The Dynamics of Demand in Developing Countries In the developing countries, marginal costs of water supply have been low, and tariffs have traditionally been low. With successful economic growth, and economic restructuring leading to high urban population growth, the economic parameters underlying urban water demand have reacted, taking many developing countries by surprise. The demand for urban water has risen faster than expected, the costs of supplying urban water services have increased much faster than expected. Where incomes are low, the income elasticity of demand for urban water is relatively high. As incomes start to increase from a low base, percentage increases in income can be substantial, and the percentage increase in the demand for water is high. The easy options of shallow ground water and perennial streams to meet the water demands are no longer available. The costs of source development are increasing. Treatment is required for urban water supplies. Increasingly sophisticated approaches to sewage, drainage, and wastewater handling are required. The marginal costs of providing urban water services are rising fast. There is a reluctance to increase tariffs accordingly. The low price levels further encourage high demand. At low price levels, the price elasticity of demand is low. Moderate price changes have little effect. Gradual increases in tariff are being swamped by the income effect, and by urban population growth. Demand is becoming excessive. Marginal costs exceed marginal benefits, and continue to escalate. The costs of meeting the increased demand are unsustainable. In many developing countries the price of water must increase substantially to bring supply and demand back into balance. It is often stated that the price of urban water should be increased gradually. A political concern is expressed that water is a basic need, and that the low income populations cannot afford big increases in price, despite the fact that present demand may be far in excess of basic need, and the marginal benefit of water consumed may be near to zero. There are many instances where gradual adjustments in tariff may never catch up to the increasing costs. There are many instances where bold decisions are needed to bring marginal cost and marginal benefit into balance. Price adjustments must not stop there. The dynamics of supply and demand, the underlying parameters of high income elasticity, high urbanisation rates, and increasing marginal cost, are such that prices must increase faster than inflation to keep marginal cost and marginal benefit in equilibrium. This is necessary, desirable and efficient. It does not create hardship, nor is it inflationary. If the marginal benefit continues to be set too low, resource use becomes inefficient, services deteriorate, economic, social and environmental costs escalate, and provision of adequate urban water services is not sustainable. This creates hardship. It is invariably the poor who suffer most. The political concern that keeps tariffs low to protect the poor is often the cause of the poor not having access to urban water supplies and of their having to pay very heavily to meet their basic need. There are plenty of examples from developing countries to illustrate that increasing tariffs to raise revenues to provide improved urban water services is more equitable than attempting to subsidise inadequate services from which those with power and influence take excessive amounts of water, while the poor receive little or no benefit. 6. Demand and Price Management The combination of low tariffs and increasing incomes has led to consumption much above the norms for urban demand. This appears to be the case for many of the cities in China. With appropriate price and demand management, consumption can be brought toward the norms for urban water consumption in other cities of the world. How can this situation be achieved? International experience has shown that simply limiting supply to production capacity has undesirable repercussions. The level of service suffers, supply becomes unreliable, and a high level of subsidy is required. Added to this, as suggested already, it is the poor who suffer the most when supply is restricted. Consumer awareness campaigns and water saving activities are alternative options, and are to be encouraged. However, international experience suggests that water saving activities on their own are rarely enough. Water saving activities are more effective when supported by appropriate price adjustments. The demand curves and elasticity parameters indicate how per capita demands might respond to price adjustments. Demand curves, together with estimates of income growth and population increase, can be used to forecast production requirements and to examine the impacts of price adjustments. Figure 4 shows the impact of different growth in production requirements. Where incomes are low, but growing rapidly, a growth rate of 10% per year in production requirement is a possibility for some time if tariff is not increased. A 10% per year growth in production would require much expenditure in capacity expansion. With an increase in tariff, growth in demand would be slowed. The need for expenditure on capacity expansion could be deferred. Impacts of recent price increases on urban water demands, and expected impacts of future price increases, were examined for the City of Shijiazhuang. As an example of how price and demand management can calm down demand, the expected situation for Shijiazhuang with and without the price adjustments is shown in Figure 5. Price levels assumed are in Table 3.
Table 3. Price levels assumed in Shijiazhuang analysis (RMB/m3 1999 constant prices)
7. Willingness to Pay and Affordability
9. Economic Impacts of Raising Tariffs Raising tariffs reduces consumption. This has an economic impact. The extent benefits are reduced can be measured by the demand curve. The extent that costs are reduced can be measured by the supply curve. If we look at the residential demand curve for average household income of RMB 2,000/month, raising tariff from RMB 1.0/m3 to RMB 2.0/m3 reduces consumption from an average 135 Lcd to 98 Lcd. The extent benefits are reduced is illustrated in Figure 8. It represents 13.5 m3/year at a value of RMB 1.5/m3, or an economic loss of about RMB 20/capita/year. The extent to which costs are reduced is shown in Figure 9. It represents 13.5 m3/year at a saving of RMB 4.4/m3, or an economic gain of about RMB 60/capita/year. The situation is similar with non residential demand. The reduction of benefits brought about by increasing tariffs is less than the reduction in costs, resulting in a net improvement to the economy. While tariffs are below cost recovery levels, raising tariff will have a greater positive economic impact than negative economic impact. It will make water resource use more efficient.
|
论文搜索
月热点论文
论文投稿
很多时候您的文章总是无缘变成铅字。研究做到关键时,试验有了起色时,是不是想和同行探讨一下,工作中有了心得,您是不是很想与人分享,那么不要只是默默工作了,写下来吧!投稿时,请以附件形式发至 paper@h2o-china.com ,请注明论文投稿。一旦采用,我们会为您增加100枚金币。