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Richard Green

Researcher at University of Canterbury

Publications -  483
Citations -  15170

Richard Green is an academic researcher from University of Canterbury. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electricity market & Electricity. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 468 publications receiving 14244 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard Green include University of Birmingham & Manchester Academic Health Science Centre.

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Competition in the British Electricity Spot Market

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the Nash equilibrium in supply schedules implies a high markup on marginal cost and substantial deadweight losses, and that subdividing the generators into five firms would produce better results.
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Elasticities in AIDS Models

TL;DR: In the literature, a variety of approaches have been used to calculate demand elasticities in almost ideal demand system (AIDS) models of demand as mentioned in this paper, and some of these approaches may lead to significant errors.
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Measuring the Benefits of Homeowning: Effects on Children Redux

TL;DR: This paper found that children of homeowners have better outcomes than children of renters whether their parents make a large or small initial investment in their home, as long as they make a minimal down payment when they buy their homes.
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Measuring the Benefits of Homeowning: Effects on Children

TL;DR: The authors examined whether home ownership benefits children by testing whether children of homeowners stay in school longer than children of renters and whether daughters of homeowners are less likely to have children as teenagers than daughters of renters.
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The electricity contract market in England and Wales

TL;DR: In the UK, wholesale electricity is sold in a spot market partly covered by long-term contracts which hedge the spot price as discussed by the authors, and two dominant conventional generators can raise spot prices well above marginal costs.