Title of article
Short- and long-run time-of-use price elasticities in Swiss residential electricity demand
Author/Authors
Massimo Filippini، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
7
From page
5811
To page
5817
Abstract
This paper presents an empirical analysis on the residential demand for electricity by time-of-day. This analysis has been performed using aggregate data at the city level for 22 Swiss cities for the period 2000−2006. For this purpose, we estimated two log–log demand equations for peak and off-peak electricity consumption using static and dynamic partial adjustment approaches. These demand functions were estimated using several econometric approaches for panel data, for example LSDV and RE for static models, and LSDV and corrected LSDV estimators for dynamic models. The attempt of this empirical analysis has been to highlight some of the characteristics of the Swiss residential electricity demand. The estimated short-run own price elasticities are lower than 1, whereas in the long-run these values are higher than 1. The estimated short-run and long-run cross-price elasticities are positive. This result shows that peak and off-peak electricity are substitutes. In this context, time differentiated prices should provide an economic incentive to customers so that they can modify consumption patterns by reducing peak demand and shifting electricity consumption from peak to off-peak periods.
Keywords
Residential electricity demand by time-of-use , Partial adjustment model , Panel data
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
973311
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