Competition and Regulation Times Headlines
26 November 2001
Media notice For immediate release
Attention: News Editors
The November issue of “Competition and Regulation Times” the newsletter of the Institute for the Study of Competition and Regulation (ISCR) newsletter contains topical articles that will be of interest to various media. These are highlighted below.
Health
Two stories deal with health
issues.
ISCR researcher Bronwyn Howell looks at the myriad of nested contracts, both implicit and explicit, that make up the National Cervical Screening Programme. She concludes that the inadequacies of the programme may be endemic and the fundamental problems identified apply to the provision of all health services in New Zealand. She also says that the Ministerial Inquiry into the design of the programme did not address the inability of any of the contracts to align the incentives of any of the agents with the patients.
The economics of whistle-blowing and why it is important for maintaining quality in the health sector are discussed by Victoria University MBA student Lisa Marriot. She says whistle-blowing is particularly important in the New Zealand health sector because of the lack of contractual mechanisms for prescribing the quality of service provided. What’s more, the extreme motivation required by people to “blow the whistle” means that the extent of substandard practices discovered is likely to be only the tip of the iceberg.
Genetic modification
For New Zealand to reap
the huge potential benefits of biotechnology, there must be
a regulatory and legal environment with appropriate
incentives for the development and use of genetically
modified organisms. Professor Neil Quigley, Pro Vice
Chancellor (Commerce and International) and Professor of
Economics at Victoria University of Wellington, writes that
a key component of the legal environment is the liability
regime for firms that undertake GM research. He says
liability rules provide incentives to invest in precautions
and to adjust the amount of potentially hazardous activity
to the socially optimal level.
Electricity
In the wake
of the electricity crisis vertical integration is one means
to hedge against generator and energy retailer risk,
according to Richard Mead, director of Cognitus Advisory
services Limited. He says that the recent rally in wholesale
energy prices in the relatively young New Zealand
electricity market heated up the ongoing debate about the
desirability of electricity generators being vertically
integrated with energy retail
companies.
Telecommunications
Senior Fellow in the
Economic Studies Program of the Brookings Institution,
Washington DC, Robert W Crandall, argues there is no reason
to return to regulated telecommunications in New Zealand.
Rather, we should find a better way to expedite court
reviews of legal issues that affect the sector. He says it
would be naïve of the Government to impose North
American/European style regulation on the telecom sector
purportedly to ensure that competition
develops.
Copies of the newsletter are available
from:
New Zealand Institute for the Study of Competition
and Regulation
PO Box 600
Wellington
Telephone:
0-4-463 5562
Email:
iscr@vuw.ac.nz