Perspective

Fortnightly Magazine - May 1 1996
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The 129 federally owned plants that make up the five PMAs generate about 6 percent of the electricity sold in the United States.1 By law, the PMAs sell wholesale power at cost to legally stipulated "preference customers" (em i.e., municipal utilities and rural electric cooperatives. The investor-owned utilities (IOUs), which sell most of the power generated in the United States, do not receive this preferential price.

Preferential access to cheap federal power lies at the heart of the PMA debate. IOUs service roughly 75 percent of power consumers. The current pricing scheme forces these consumers to subsidize (em directly or indirectly (em the 25 percent of consumers served by the PMAs at below-market rates. The PMAs have something of a noble history in electrifying the United States, but "rural" is no longer synonymous with "poor." You'd be hard pressed to find poor farmers in "rural" Hilton Head and Vail. And as far as the subsidies to Las Vegas are concerned:

"[When you] stroll leisurely down the gaily lit Strip, remember that you're about to lose twice. Once at the slots, and the second time when you realize that it's your electricity that's lighting up the night."2

Concern over government involvement in a commercial activity also fuels the debate. As wholesale and retail wheeling become more widespread and their benefits to consumers more apparent, government's continuing involvement could prove highly disruptive. In the competitive environment of the future, prices will respond to market forces, not cost-based regulation. The PMAs, like speedbumps, will only slow the transition.

In addition, the PMAs threaten the future competitiveness of the energy industry because they are both unfair and inefficient:

s IOUs lack access to power generated at PMA facilities

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