This paper examines how public governance in government-controlled industries affects the ownership structure and economic viability of service providers. The study considers the case of a regulated industry – the local public transport services - in one specific country – Italy – characterized by high decentralized autonomy over public governance choices across different levels of government. Although a relatively large management literature deals with corporate governance issues in public services, there is a paucity of research on the relationship between public governance and industry performance. The study gives evidence that public governance affects the ownership structure and the competitive position of service providers. Despite liberalisation reforms, the ownership concentration in most of the companies contracted for the urban transport service is still in the hands of local governments (i.e. in-house contracting). To date, private shareholders act mainly in small companies contracting for extra-urban services or fixed urban routes. Hence, the success of public governance reforms has been partial. These findings provide empirical support for the strong influences of public governance in local public-transport services and the presence in the Italian market of competition models and selection mechanisms based on strong government-political influence rather than market-driven management decisions.
Nobolo, A., Guarini, E., Magli, F. (2011). Good governance for government-controlled industries: an exploratory study on local public transport companies. In XXXIV Convegno annuale AIDEA. Aziende di servizi e servizi per le aziende. La ricerca di un percorso di sviluppo sostenibile per superare la crisi.
Good governance for government-controlled industries: an exploratory study on local public transport companies
NOBOLO, ALBERTO;GUARINI, ENRICO;MAGLI, FRANCESCA
2011
Abstract
This paper examines how public governance in government-controlled industries affects the ownership structure and economic viability of service providers. The study considers the case of a regulated industry – the local public transport services - in one specific country – Italy – characterized by high decentralized autonomy over public governance choices across different levels of government. Although a relatively large management literature deals with corporate governance issues in public services, there is a paucity of research on the relationship between public governance and industry performance. The study gives evidence that public governance affects the ownership structure and the competitive position of service providers. Despite liberalisation reforms, the ownership concentration in most of the companies contracted for the urban transport service is still in the hands of local governments (i.e. in-house contracting). To date, private shareholders act mainly in small companies contracting for extra-urban services or fixed urban routes. Hence, the success of public governance reforms has been partial. These findings provide empirical support for the strong influences of public governance in local public-transport services and the presence in the Italian market of competition models and selection mechanisms based on strong government-political influence rather than market-driven management decisions.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.