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Home >  Short Publications >  Electricity Pricing to U.S. Manufacturing Plants, 1963-2000
Electricity Pricing to U.S. Manufacturing Plants, 1963-2000
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By Steven J. Davis, Cheryl Grim, John Haltiwanger, Mary Streitwieser
Posted: Tuesday, March 18, 2008
PAPERS AND STUDIES
National Bureau of Economic Research  (March 2008)
Publication Date: March 18, 2008

Visiting Scholar Steven J. Davis  
Visiting Scholar Steven J. Davis
 
We develop a large customer-level database to study electricity pricing to U.S. manufacturing plants from 1963 to 2000. We document tremendous dispersion in price per kWh, trace that dispersion to quantity discounts and spatial differentials, estimate the role of cost factors in quantity discounts, and test whether marginal price schedules conform to marginal cost and Ramsey pricing conditions. Our cost analysis and pricing tests rely on a novel empirical approach that exploits utility-level differences in the customer size distribution to estimate how supply costs vary with purchase quantity.

The results reveal that annual supply costs per kWh fall by more than half in moving from smaller to bigger purchasers, providing a clear cost-based rationale for quantity discounts. Before the mid 1970s, marginal price and marginal cost schedules are nearly identical, in line with efficient pricing.In later years, marginal supply costs exceed marginal prices for smaller manufacturing customers by 10% or more. In contrast to a clear role for cost factors, our evidence provides no support for a standard Ramsey-pricing interpretation of quantity discounts. Spatial dispersion in retail electricity prices among states, counties and utility service territories is large and rises over time for smaller purchasers.. . .

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Steven J. Davis is a visiting scholar at AEI.

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