• 🦘min0nim🦘
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    1 year ago

    So, let’s be honest here - producers artificially ramped up wholesale costs in the months before the new increases were handed down by the regulators (e.g. restrict supply through maintenance, and then unleash supply when the price is higher).

    They can do this because the biggest ones are both on the retail and wholesale side. We’re getting fucking fleeced.

    • flathead@quex.cc
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      1 year ago

      Of course. Privatization of public utilities, particularly energy generation and distribution systems, is simply a transfer of common wealth to private. Fleecing people who don’t understand the arcane pricing structures of “the market” they pretend is operating is just another revenue opportunity.

      • macrocephalic@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Privatisation can only work if there’s true deregulation. This just isn’t feasible for utilities as there’s only one distribution system (and it would be stupid to have more) and the barrier to entry for wholesale is too much to truly allow competition.

        • flathead@quex.cc
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          1 year ago

          Full deregulation implies that speculators are free to create trading options. In most cases the major interests are capable of manipulating the traded commodity price via their control of supply. Also, as you point out, barriers to entry of utilities create a walled garden that shouldn’t be handed over to an entity whose mission is to create profit and enrich its owners. Deregulation implies rolling back regulations often created in response to the excesses of an unregulated market.

        • tuff_wizard
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          1 year ago

          Maybe we’re working under different assumptions but I can’t see how a private company with no regulation would do anything other than continue to try and maximise profits at the cost of everything and everyone around them.

          I mean there was true deregulation in the first place. So many things went wrong that they had to start regulating things.