How the World Works

Texas' deregulation sticker shock

Schadenfreude alert:

In 2002, Texas sweepingly deregulated its electricity market. Today, a page one story in the Wall Street Journal by Rebecca Smith informs us that citizens of Texas are paying some of the highest electricity rates in the United States.

Power costs are rising in the rest of the U.S., but everything is bigger in Texas: On a hot day in May, wholesale prices rose briefly to more than $4 a kilowatt hour -- about 40 times the national average.

But that's OK. Because:

"The system is working the way it is supposed to work," says state Rep. Phil King, the Republican from Weatherford who is chairman of the House Regulated Industries Committee.

Such honesty from an elected official is to be applauded. Of course, what King really means is that high prices are supposed to provide incentives for utilities to build new power plants and improve the transmission grid, but the WSJ's Smith doesn't tell us anything about whether new supply is coming online.

A couple of weeks ago, the Nation featured an exuberant look at the prospects of Democrats wresting Texas from Republican hands. My initial opinion was that the article was more an exercise in wishful thinking than sober political analysis. But who knows? Republicans own the state, lock, stock and barrel, and Republicans have delivered to their constituents some of the highest electricity prices in the country. Well done!

A name China scholars will remember
John "Beginning Chinese" DeFrancis passes away. Who knew he once tangled with Senator Joe McCarthy?
Obama: "A clean break from a troubled past"
The president-elect makes his case to the nation for immediate action on the economy. Let's hope Senate Republicans were listening.
Even Wal-Mart gets the blues
Cutbacks in discretionary spending take their toll, even at the "low-price leader"
How humans cooled the earth -- 500 years ago
After pandemics caused a mass die-off in the New World, farmland turned to forest and temperatures dropped

About How the World Works

A conversation about globalization.

Recent Posts

Obama: "A clean break from a troubled past"
The president-elect makes his case to the nation for immediate action on the economy. Let's hope Senate Republicans were listening.
Even Wal-Mart gets the blues
Cutbacks in discretionary spending take their toll, even at the "low-price leader"
How humans cooled the earth -- 500 years ago
After pandemics caused a mass die-off in the New World, farmland turned to forest and temperatures dropped

Full Archive

RSS Feed

Posts by date

January 2009
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Comments?

You can e-mail me directly at aleonard@salon.com. But to join the conversation with your comments, please use our letters to the editor feature at the bottom of each article.