Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state policy in most of the developing countries, including India, had vested the power industry in the hands of the state as a promotional agency for subsidized supply. However, with the onset of the neo-liberalism in the wake of the fall (of the threat) of socialist alternative, the promotional orientation in the state policy had to give way to efficiency considerations in the sense of a neoclassical market economy. Thus has started the infamous power sector restructuring, the technical term for ultimate privatization. Radical policy changes were legislated in India and so far 13 States have reorganized their power sector; in Orissa, Delhi and Noida ...
When grand institutional reforms based on idealized models are stalled by the poor institutional env...
Privatisation of public sector enterprises becomes an important policy issue in the context of the c...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
The crises of utilities in developing countries led to a World Bank diagnosis of their problems and ...
True to the spirit of a social-democratic State, India had originally evolved her power development...
Power sector policy in India appears to have locked itself into adverse arrangements at least twice ...
The power sector reforms of Delhi, the capital of India presents an interesting case in the evolutio...
How has the Indian state changed with economic liberalization? While many scholars have explored the...
In this paper, we attempt at an analysis of the political economy of the Indian power sector with s...
The 1990s witnessed a worldwide trend toward electricity sector reforms in developed and developing ...
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: The politics of electricity reform: Evidence from West Bengal, Ind...
State intervention in India has persisted but has proved far from immune to critiques of traditional...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
More than two decades have passed since the start of the worldwide marketoriented electricity sector...
When grand institutional reforms based on idealized models are stalled by the poor institutional env...
Privatisation of public sector enterprises becomes an important policy issue in the context of the c...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
The crises of utilities in developing countries led to a World Bank diagnosis of their problems and ...
True to the spirit of a social-democratic State, India had originally evolved her power development...
Power sector policy in India appears to have locked itself into adverse arrangements at least twice ...
The power sector reforms of Delhi, the capital of India presents an interesting case in the evolutio...
How has the Indian state changed with economic liberalization? While many scholars have explored the...
In this paper, we attempt at an analysis of the political economy of the Indian power sector with s...
The 1990s witnessed a worldwide trend toward electricity sector reforms in developed and developing ...
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: The politics of electricity reform: Evidence from West Bengal, Ind...
State intervention in India has persisted but has proved far from immune to critiques of traditional...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
More than two decades have passed since the start of the worldwide marketoriented electricity sector...
When grand institutional reforms based on idealized models are stalled by the poor institutional env...
Privatisation of public sector enterprises becomes an important policy issue in the context of the c...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...