
Processes, Information, and Accounting Gaps in the Regulation of Argentina's Private Railways / Estache, Antonio
July 2001 - How do you set up a regulatory accounting system for a sector no longer under the government's direct control, after railways have been turned over to concessions in varied circumstances and where available information is provided mainly by private operators? As a result of inexperi...
Guardado en:
Autores principales: | Estache, Antonio |
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Otros Autores: | Campos-Méndez, Javier Trujillo Castellano, Lourdes |
Formato: | Online-Resource |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: | Washington, D.C : The World Bank, 2001 |
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | URL des Erstveröffentlichers |
Sumario: | July 2001 - How do you set up a regulatory accounting system for a sector no longer under the government's direct control, after railways have been turned over to concessions in varied circumstances and where available information is provided mainly by private operators? As a result of inexperience in setting up concession agreements, the agreements did not clearly define the information needed for oversight and regulation. Almost a decade after Argentina began privatizing its railways, resolution of the conflicts between regulators, users, and operators continues to take longer, and to be more difficult, than expected. Campos-Méndez, Estache, and Trujillo contend that many of these conflicts arose because there are no rules for interactions between the key stakeholders: government, regulators, users, unions, and the media. One result of inexperience in setting up concession agreements has been that the agreements did not clearly define the information needed for oversight and regulation. Argentine rail concession contracts were supposed to be specific about the way tariffs, quality, investment, exclusivity, and so on, would change over time. And the newly created regulatory bodies were given some discretion about adjusting the contracts in the face of unforeseen developments. However, initial privatizations were carried out in such a way that there was no time to refine terms, so many loopholes remained. Those unforeseen events have happened, and the regulatory agency, the CNRT, has had to adapt its procedures and decisions to available information. In some cases, alleged modifications of the operating environment have led to renegotiations. Changes have been introduced in the approach to furnishing information to the government for oversight and regulatory accounting. |
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Notas: | Weitere Ausgabe: Estache, Antonio: Processes, Information, and Accounting Gaps in the Regulation of Argentina's Private Railways |
Descripción Física: | 1 Online-Ressource (52 Seiten) |