World Bank2014-08-252014-08-252003-10https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19649This review argues that, following the 1997 crisis, the proposed reform plan was helped by some particularly conducive country factors: a tough, but not paralyzing challenge, a quick return to macroeconomic stability, and, and influential reform champion. However, many sector factors worked against the plan, among these were the sector's acceptable level of efficiency, and consistent resistance by incumbent state-owned utilities, and a biased reading of the international experience. Although market liberalization was politically feasible, its political desirability was weak. The report pays particular attention to: 1) sequencing reform; 2) adapting and making amends to the market model, but minimizing risks, and cost of market failures in a developing country context; and, 3) selling the reform, by improving perceptions of benefits and costs, especially mitigating social impacts. Particularly suggested is the interaction between the political economy, and the technical design of reform, i.e., in order for negotiations to arrive at a politically desirable, and feasible roadmap, they must be subjected to a technical scrutiny, that ensures that the final reform plan is sound.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOACCOUNTINGAUCTIONSBIDDINGBOOK VALUECLEAN COALCLEAN FUELSCOALCOAL TECHNOLOGIESCOMMERCIALIZATIONCOMPETITIVENESSCREDITWORTHINESSDEBTDEVELOPING COUNTRY CONTEXTECONOMIC ACTIVITYECONOMIC EFFICIENCYECONOMIC GROWTHECONOMISTSELECTRIC POWERELECTRICITYELECTRICITY GENERATIONELECTRICITY PRICESELECTRICITY SECTORELECTRICITY SUPPLYEMPLOYMENTEND-USEENERGY CONSERVATIONENERGY PRACTICESENERGY PRICESENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENTFISCAL DEFICITSFISCAL PERFORMANCEFUELFUEL CONSUMPTIONGASGAS RESOURCESIMPORTSINCOMEINFLATIONLABOR PRODUCTIVITYLEGISLATIONLICENSESLOAN GUARANTEESMACROECONOMIC STABILITYMARKET FAILURESMARKET LIBERALIZATIONMARKET REFORMSMARKET RISKMARKET STRUCTUREMARKETINGMINESMONOPOLIESNATURAL GASPETROLEUM PRODUCTSPOLITICAL ECONOMYPRICE CAPSPRICE CHANGESPRICING REFORMSPRIVATE SECTORPRODUCERSPRODUCTIVITYPUBLIC OWNERSHIPPUBLIC SECTORPUBLIC SECTOR INVESTMENTSPUBLIC SECTOR REFORMREFORM PROGRAMSRETAILSALESSUPPLIERSSUSTAINABLE ENERGYTRANSFER PRICESThailand : Why Liberalization May Stall in a Mature Power Market10.1596/19649