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Turkey has been reforming its energy markets since the 1980s,
culminating in two major bills in the early 2000s. The country has
restructured electricity and natural gas markets, establishing an
independent regulatory agency (EMRA) and passed legislation on
renewable and nuclear energy. With these regulatory reforms,
Turkey, as a candidate country for accession to the European Union
(EU), has aimed to direct the energy markets to a more competitive
environment in parallel with EU energy directives. This book
contains an analysis of regulatory reforms in Turkish energy
markets (electricity, natural gas, renewable and nuclear energy),
the impact of these reforms on country's energy portfolio and role
in global energy trade, especially between the EU, the Caspian,
Caucasus, and Central Asia. Finally, the book concludes with
recommendations for Turkish energy policy. The authors are expert
scholars who have written extensively on Turkish regulatory reform
and energy economics and who have broad knowledge of global energy
market dynamics. The book will be a unique guide for those
concerned with the different areas of the Turkish economy and
international audiences interested in energy markets of Turkey and
surrounding regions, making the book of interest to not only
researchers in academia but also industry practitioners, regulators
and policy makers as well.
Turkey has been reforming its energy markets since the 1980s,
culminating in two major bills in the early 2000s. The country has
restructured electricity and natural gas markets, establishing an
independent regulatory agency (EMRA) and passed legislation on
renewable and nuclear energy. With these regulatory reforms,
Turkey, as a candidate country for accession to the European Union
(EU), has aimed to direct the energy markets to a more competitive
environment in parallel with EU energy directives. This book
contains an analysis of regulatory reforms in Turkish energy
markets (electricity, natural gas, renewable and nuclear energy),
the impact of these reforms on country's energy portfolio and role
in global energy trade, especially between the EU, the Caspian,
Caucasus, and Central Asia. Finally, the book concludes with
recommendations for Turkish energy policy. The authors are expert
scholars who have written extensively on Turkish regulatory reform
and energy economics and who have broad knowledge of global energy
market dynamics. The book will be a unique guide for those
concerned with the different areas of the Turkish economy and
international audiences interested in energy markets of Turkey and
surrounding regions, making the book of interest to not only
researchers in academia but also industry practitioners, regulators
and policy makers as well.
This study, the first to look at the analytics of and experience with financial reform, examines a number of issues: the relationship between the financial and real sectors, and how this behavior can affect the economy at large; the process of reform and the sequencing of various elements, including in particular the timing of opening of the capital account; the impact of financial reforms on the efficiency with which capital is allocated.
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