Lynne Kiesling
Lynne Kiesling is Director of Economic Policy at Reason Public Policy Institute. She is also Visiting Associate Professor of Economics at Northwestern University. Her previous positions include Assistant Professor of Economics at the College of William and Mary, and Manager in the Transfer Pricing Economics group at PriceWaterhouseCoopers LLP. She has a Ph.D. in economics from Northwestern University, and has published extensively in academic journals.
-
Are Hydrogen Fueling Station Subsidies Necessary?
Forcing hydrogen to follow gasoline model is poor choice
-
Scapegoating Isn’t an Energy Policy
Blackouts, high rates are the result of government's poor decisions
-
The Economics of Hydrogen: Innovation in Mature and New Technologies
Hydrogen fuel cells are not silver bullet
-
The Science of Hydrogen Fuel Cells
Bush pledges $1.2 billion in subsidies
-
Fuel-cell Powered PDAs? They’re Coming
Alternatives to batteries are coming
-
Electricity Transmission and Rates of Technological Diffusion
Milestone in transmission wires
-
Market-Based Electricity Pricing
Puget Sound Energy's pilot program
-
Standard Market Design in Wholesale Electricity Markets
Can FERC's Proposed Structure Adapt to the Unknown?
-
CO2 Emissions Trading
Creating a market for carbon dioxide emissions
-
Vernon Smith and Retail Electricity Deregulation
The benefits of choice
-
California Public Utilities Commission Study Lacking
Report overlooks many practical and economic questions
-
Retail Pricing Critical Element for Electricity Industry
Choice would reduce costs, outages
-
Oil and Gas Price Stability
Oil prices have risen 49 percent this year, stabilize this month
-
Good News on Electricity Competition Front
Choice lowers PA rates significantly
-
Electric Cooperatives and a Changing Power Industry
How Outdated Statutes Short-circuit Competitive Markets
-
GAO and the California Energy Crisis
Study ignores strategic interests of utilities
-
Consumers, Gas Prices Better Off Without Help From Politicians
Conspiracy theories, price caps aren't answer