1. Introduction
Increasing the energy universal service level to improve people’s wellbeing is quite important for China’s sustainable energy development. Nowadays, as one of the basic energy sources, electric power is essential for people’s survival and the normal operation of society. Therefore, the significance of popularizing electric service is evident. In China, solving problems, such as the electricity shortage in undeveloped and remote areas, can promote both the individual living standard and regional economic development, which is the duty-bound social responsibility of the Chinese government. “
China’s Energy Policy (2012)” issued by the State Council of the People’s Republic of China has proposed: (1) increasing the financial investment to solve the electricity-free issues in Tibet, Qinghai, Xinjiang, Yunnan, Inner Mongolia and Sichuan provinces; (2) establishing and improving the electric universal service system with the function of social public service in densely inhabited areas without electricity; and (3) basically solving the electricity-free problem for the rural area population before the end of 2015 [
1].
Being a public service project, electric universal service aims to improve the individual living quality in remote and underdeveloped areas, the implementation of which can promote the sustainable development of the local economy and individual living. The electric universal service is led by the government, implemented by the electric power enterprises and provides benefits to the whole of society. The electric universal service holds the same characteristics as other universal services, which are: (1) the scope of universal service should be the majority of electricity consumers; (2) the universal service pricing should be acceptable for electricity consumers; and (3) the universal service quality should be guaranteed [
2]. The implementation of electric universal service can improve the social welfare and promote sustainable development of the whole society. Analyzing the implementation effect of electric universal service can identify the social and economic returns of electric universal service as a public service project led by the government. Therefore, an evaluation model on the social welfare of electric universal service should be proposed, and then, a social welfare evaluation of electric universal service should be performed based on the proposed model.
With regard to the current research on social welfare, most researchers put their emphasis on two aspects, which are the social welfare function and the social welfare assessment related to specific practical issues. In terms of the social welfare function, Hanany [
3] proposed an ordinal Nash social welfare function based on risk preferences assuming a common, worst social state (origin) for all individuals. Sethuraman
et al. [
4] characterized the class of anonymous and monotonic Arrovian social welfare functions on domains without Condorcet triples and described a domain where anonymous and monotonic Arrovian social welfare functions exist only when there are an odd number of agents. Alain Trannoy [
5] used equivalence scales as the right weights of the social welfare function when needs differ. Wada [
6] proposed a divisor apportionment method, which links Stolarsky mean apportionment methods to Kolm–Atkinson social welfare maximization and to generalized entropy minimization. Keller [
7] generalized Kalai’s results to a broader class of distributions of the individual preferences and obtained new lower bounds on the probability of a rational outcome in several classes of the generalized social welfare function. In terms of the social welfare assessment of specific practical issues, Zaharieva [
8] proposed an equilibrium matching model to study social welfare and wage inequality considering a job search through personal contacts that can generate wage premiums or penalties depending on the parameter of bargaining power. Neil
et al. [
9] studied the social security, growth and welfare in overlapping generations’ economies with or without annuities by employing a stylized pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) social security program. Rousse [
10] provided theoretical arguments about the potential welfare-decreasing impact of citizen’s participation when at least one of these assumptions was violated and recommended a limited participation of individuals in permit schemes while encouraging a better diffusion of information toward this class of potential participants. Kim
et al. [
11] proposed a distributed task allocation algorithm for a team of robots with resource constraints inspired by social welfare in economics, and social welfare based on the task allocation method positioned a robot team appropriately in preparedness for dynamic future events and enabled them to achieve the objectives of the system flexibly depending on the application context. Mæstada
et al. [
12] reconsidered the properties of applied social welfare functions to combine efficiency and equity considerations in the social valuation of health allocations and concluded that one should be cautious in applying the standard welfare economic framework to the allocation of health. Schlör
et al. [
13] used the Atkinson index based on a social welfare function as an analytical tool to examine the interactions between economic activity and energy services. Nabavia
et al. [
14] presented a fuzzy-based genetic algorithm to maximize total system social welfare by the best placement and sizing of Thyristor-Controlled Series Capacitor (TCSC) and Static Synchronous Series Compensator (SSSC) devices, considering their investment cost in a double-sided auction market. Lipow
et al. [
15] suggested that offering recruits an option to serve as reservists enhances social welfare if there is a sufficiently strong relationship between recruit performance in the military and their expected civilian income. Murakami [
16] studied the time effect of low-cost carrier entry and social welfare in U.S. large air markets and draws the conclusion that the impact of low-cost carriers’ entries did not differ between the entry year and the second year and that the social welfare gains are substantial; 90% of welfare gains come from the gain in consumers’ surplus. Pirnia
et al. [
17] studied the policy implications of Ontario’s Feed-in-Tariffs (FIT) on overall societal welfare and suggested that, if unbounded, existing FIT would have a large negative impact on consumer welfare, with an overall net loss on total social welfare. Kanakasabapathy [
18] studied the economic impact of pumped storage power plant on the social welfare of electricity market and draws the conclusion that energy trading by pumped storage can increase the overall social welfare of the market.
From the above literature reviews, it can be seen that current studies related to social welfare in the field of energy and electricity are few. To the best of our knowledge, the social welfare evaluation of electric universal service has rarely been studied. Therefore, proposing an appropriate model to evaluate the social welfare of electric universal service is quite necessary, which can fill the research gap. Meanwhile, the social welfare evaluation result of electric universal service can provide some reference for the administrative department’s policy making related to electric universal service and the effective provision of electric universal service by the electric power company.
Different from goods in the competitive market, the utility of electric universal service cannot be analyzed by the competitive equilibrium (Pareto optimality) theory. The electric universal service is advanced by government public policies, and the object is vulnerable groups. The welfare feeling of service-acquired individual has obvious subjectivity. Influenced by some factors, such as income level, cultural background and consumption habit, different individuals have different welfare feelings when enjoying the same electric universal service. The disparity of individual utility ordering due to individual different rationality cannot be ignored, which will lead to the diversity of the utility evaluation.
Considering the individual subjective judgment factors and objective factors, this paper proposes an evaluation model for the social welfare of electric universal service by employing Atkinson’s social welfare function and the ideological connotation of the prospect theory from the perspective of sustainability. This paper is organized as follows:
Section 2 introduces the meaning of electric universal service in China and its social welfare.
Section 3 identifies the factors influencing the social welfare sense of electric universal service from the perspective of sustainability. A social welfare evaluation model of electric universal service is proposed in
Section 4, which is divided into an economic welfare evaluation model and a non-economic welfare evaluation model. Taking Yunnan province in China as the example, the empirical analysis is performed in
Section 5.
Section 6 concludes this paper.
3. The Factors Influencing Social Welfare Sense of Electric Universal Service
The concept “welfare sense” emphasizes the individual’s subjective feeling, which stems from individual evaluation of his/her own welfare. In the process of welfare evaluation, an individual reference standard not only includes one’s own objective conditions, but also considers comparison with others. The comparison of individual welfare changes with the adopted different reference standards. Therefore, purely taking the objective economic utility as the standard of welfare evaluation is incomplete. Meanwhile, the differences between economic level, living standard and cultural custom of universal service recipients make their service understanding and welfare sense largely different, and the individual demand for electric universal service is also different. In other words, the individual subjective feeling can exert a great influence on their welfare sense. Therefore, the individual subjective factors should not to be ignored when the social welfare sense of electric universal service is evaluated. In a word, the evaluation of the social welfare of electric universal service should include both objective factors and subjective factors, which can be represented by economic welfare factors and non-economic welfare factors, respectively.
When selecting the factors influencing the social welfare sense of electric universal service, the scientific, objective, maneuverable and pertinent principles should be followed. Considering the subjective and objective factors of service recipients affecting the welfare sense of electric universal service, as well as the current development situation related to the electricity distribution and a resident living in China, the factors influencing the social welfare sense of electric universal service are identified by the Delphi method [
19], the literature review method and the on-spot interview method. By reviewing related literature and conducting on-spot interviews, the initial and important factors are identified. Then, the questionnaires, including initial factors, are distributed to experts and practitioners. Through analyzing the questionnaire results, the key and representative factors are finally determined from the perspective of sustainability, which are listed in
Table 1. From
Table 1, it can be seen that the factors influencing the social welfare sense of electric universal service, which is also called the index system of social welfare evaluation of electric universal service, are composed of four first-grade indexes and ten second-grade indicators. The four first-grade indexes are financial situation, family status, electric service condition and education level, as well as vocational status, respectively. The ten second-grade indicators are per capita disposable income, income satisfaction degree, the Gini coefficient, living satisfaction degree, electric service satisfaction degree, electricity price level, annual electricity consumption, electric service realization degree, educational level and vocational recognition degree, respectively.
When the disposable income of a person increases, on the one hand, he/she can consume more goods or new goods that he/she wants to buy, which can improve the living standard, which can promote personal sustainable development; on the other hand, the capability to shield against risks, such as illness and sudden accidents, can be enhanced, which can promote the harmonious and sustainable development of a family. When a person feels more satisfied with income, he/she can pay more attention to individual working and future development, which can promote social sustainable development. The Gini coefficient is a measure of statistical dispersion intended to represent the income distribution of a nation’s residents. The larger the Gini coefficient is, the stronger the inequality degree. Therefore, when the Gini coefficient becomes larger, the inequality of income or wealth in the society is greater, which is not beneficial to social sustainable development. When a person feels happier with his/her living, he/she has a good atmosphere and more willingness to work hard, which can improve the individual living condition and then promote individual sustainability. Electric service level is an important factor reflecting the satisfaction degree of electricity consumers for electricity goods provided by electric power company. Electric service level reflects the opportunity of a person sharing energy resources in a society, which embodies the energy equality. The higher the electric service satisfaction or realization degree is, the more the equality of a person sharing energy resources. The electricity price is related to individual disposable income. A proper and fair electricity price can guide a person to do the right thing with limited income. Education and vocation also have a close relationship with individual development. A person who receives higher education usually has more chances to realize individual ideal and life values, which is more conducive to promoting individual sustainable development. Therefore, from the above analysis, we can see that the selected factors are quite related to sustainability.
Among the second-grade influencing factors, indicators B1, B3, B6 and B7 are the objective factors, the values of which come from objective economic data obtained by statistical materials; indicators B2, B4, B5, B8, B9 and B10 are the subjective factors, the values of which come from individual scoring according to their own situations. The objective factors stand for the practical utilities of electric universal service recipients, while the subjective factors stand for the emotional utilities.
Table 1.
Index system of the social welfare evaluation of electric universal service.
Table 1.
Index system of the social welfare evaluation of electric universal service.
Object | First-grade index, | Second-grade indicator |
---|
Ai | Bj |
---|
Social welfare of electric universal service, X | Financial situation, A1 | Per capita disposable income, B1 |
Income satisfaction degree, B2 |
Family status, A2 | Gini coefficient, B3 |
Living satisfaction degree, B4 |
Electric service condition, A3 | Electric service satisfaction degree, B5 |
Electricity price level, B6 |
Annual electricity consumption, B7 |
Electric service realization degree, B8 |
Education level, as well as vocational status, A4 | Educational level, B9 |
Vocational recognition degree, B10 |
4. Social Welfare Evaluation Model of Electric Universal Service
The social welfare of electric universal service can be divided into two parts, i.e., economic welfare and non-economic welfare. Economic welfare stands for the objective aspect of the social welfare of electric universal service; while the non-economic welfare stands for the individual subjective aspect.
4.1. Economic Welfare Evaluation Model
Economic welfare reflects a part of the social welfare, which is represented by the objective economic benefits. The construction of the economic welfare evaluation model is based on the objective influencing factors of the social welfare sense of electric universal service, namely indicators B1, B3, B6 and B7.
Among the four objective factors mentioned above, indicator B1 (per capita disposable income) is one of the most important factors determining the individual welfare. The individual welfare depends first on the individual income, and the higher the individual income, the larger the individual welfare. According to the theory of welfare economics, the welfare sense derived from the individual income will be affected by the equality degree of income distribution. In the case of fair income distribution, the values of individual income and corresponding welfare are equal. However, in other cases, the unfair degree of income distribution shows the positive correlation with the gap between individual income and corresponding welfare. Therefore, from the statistics perspective, the adverse effect due to the income distribution inequality should be eliminated during the economic welfare evaluation of electric universal service. The per capita disposable income reflects the economic benefits obtained by the whole society under the environment of electric universal service, but it neglects the income distribution. Therefore, the indicator B3 (Gini coefficient) is employed to consider the influence on individual subjective feeling from the unfair income distribution. The indicators B6 (electricity price level) and B7 (annual electricity consumption) can reflect the electricity consumption status of the whole society under the environment of electric universal service, both of which can reflect the implementation effect of electric universal service intuitively. The electric universal service with an effective electricity pricing mechanism can allow the inhabitant to afford the electricity consumption, maintain the stability of social electricity consumption and even promote electricity consumption. Part of the economic welfare due to electric universal service implementation can be measured by the proportion of electricity consumption expenditure in the national net income. The proportion of electricity consumption expenditure in per capita disposable income shows an inverse relationship with economic welfare, namely the higher the former, the lower the latter.
In this paper, the Gini coefficient, which is the standard measure indicator of inequality in a society, is employed to replace the income inequality coefficient of Atkinson’s social welfare function [
20]. The Gini coefficient varies between zero, which reflects complete equality, and one, which indicates complete inequality. Therefore, the proportion of electricity consumption expenditure in the national net income under the environment of electric universal service can be measured by Equation (1).
where
p represents the electricity price;
Q represents the national electricity consumption;
I represents per capita disposable income;
G represents the
Gini coefficient;
N represents the population size.
For Equation (1), p × Q represents the electricity consumption expenditure, I × N represents the disposable income of people in a group and I × (1 − G) × N represents the disposable income of people eliminating the inequality factors.
Thus, the economic welfare of electric universal service can be measured by Equation (2).
where
E represents the economic welfare index of electric universal service.
From the foregoing, the economic welfare of electric universal service is by no means a simple accumulation of various economic benefits, but pays more attention to the “efficiency” of economic benefits, which means that the individual social welfare sense of electric universal service related to economic benefits is more emphasized.
4.2. Non-Economic Welfare Evaluation Model
Non-economic welfare, which cannot be measured by monetary value, is mainly represented by the improvement of human wellbeing. From the perspective of individual environmental difference and individual rational diversity, the non-economic welfare should be characterized by the individual subjective feeling factors of electric universal service. As discussed above, the subjective factors affecting the social welfare sense of electric universal service are income satisfaction degree, living satisfaction degree, electric service satisfaction degree, electric service realization degree, educational level and vocational recognition degree. These indicators’ values can be obtained by individual scoring.
According to the prospect theory, the comparison between the individual prospection and reality, as well as the status of individuals will affect the preference selection on the losses and gains, both of which map to the value function [
21,
22]. Applying this thought of prospect theory into the issue of social welfare of electric universal service, we can determine that the individual subjective judgment on welfare with different reference standards is the primary source of the individual welfare sense difference of electric universal service. The above six subjective factors perform the judgment on individual living, as well as the satisfaction and rationality about electric service, and they also make the subjective determination on the welfare, taking other individuals’ status as the reference.
The influencing factors of non-economic welfare make different contributions to the individual overall welfare feeling, the contributions of which can be viewed as different components of the non-economic welfare of electric universal service. In the prospect theory, the calculation of individual utility is based on the probability judgment, and the expected utility of the outcomes to the individual making the decision is composed of the obtained value from the outcome and its probabilities. This theory describes the way people choose between probabilistic alternatives that involve risk, where the probabilities of the outcomes are known, and people evaluate these losses and gains using certain heuristics to make a decision. Inspired by the probability-based expected utility in prospect theory, the calculation method of the non-economic welfare of electric universal service is developed, the concept of which is: if the influencing factors’ values of non-economic welfare are supposed to be the different utility levels (corresponding to the obtained value from the outcome in prospect theory), the importance of these factors on non-economic welfare is considered as their probability of occurrence, which can be represented by the indicators’ weights (corresponding to the probabilities of outcomes). Therefore, the non-economic welfare of electric universal service can be measured by Equation (3).
where
bi represents the value of indicator
i affecting the non-economic welfare, which can be obtained by individual scoring;
ωi represents the weight of indicator
i, which can be calculated by a weight determination method, such as analytic hierarchy process (AHP).
The analytic hierarchy process (AHP) method is a multiple criteria decision-making approach created to solve complex multiple criteria problems involving qualitative decisions [
23]. The basic principle of using the AHP method to determine the weights of subjective factors are as follows: according to the hierarchical structure based on the interrelationship between indicators, the importance of each indicator within the same layer with regard to the upper layer is compared, and then, the importance of each indicator with regard to the final object can be obtained [
19,
24]. The evaluation index system of the non-economic welfare of electric universal service has a multi-level hierarchical structure, and there is a certain relationship between the subjective indicators. Therefore, the AHP method can be employed to determine the subjective indicator weight in this paper.
4.3. Social Welfare Evaluation Model of Electric Universal Service
From the above analysis, the economic welfare of electric universal service can be measured based on the non-dimensional actual economic data, while the non-economic welfare can be measured based on the individual scoring data. According to the meaning of electric universal service, its social welfare can be calculated by Equation (4).
where
W represents the social welfare of electric universal service;
α and
β represent the adjustment coefficient of economic and non-economic welfare, respectively; and 0 <
α,
β < 1,
α +
β = 1. The function of adjustment coefficient is to adjust the relationship between economic and non-economic welfare of electric universal service in different areas.
Substituting Equations (1)–(3) into Equation (4), the social welfare evaluation model of electric universal service can be obtained, just as shown in Equation (5).
In Equation (5), the proportion of electricity consumption expenditure in the national net income can reflect the economic welfare of electric universal service, which takes the unfair income distribution into consideration, combining per capita disposable income and the Gini coefficient, while the non-economic welfare can be reflected by the individual subjective factors values and their corresponding weights.
6. Conclusions
Being a public service project, electric universal service has been implemented for several years in China. The effective implementation of electric universal service can improve individual’s welfare feeling and promote the sustainable development of people’s lives and the local economy to some extent. The research on the social welfare evaluation model of electric universal service can provide a theoretical method for analyzing the welfare effect of electric universal service implementation. Up to now, the studies related to electric universal service are still at the exploratory stage. Therefore, the proposed evaluation model in this paper based on Atkinson’s social welfare function and prospect theory from the perspective of sustainability can fill the current research gap related to electric universal service.
According to the proposed evaluation model and empirical analysis, we can safely draw the following conclusions:
- (1)
The social welfare evaluation model of electric universal service proposed in this paper not only includes the economic welfare, but also considers the non-economic welfare. When evaluating the economic welfare, we pay more attention to the effect of economic benefit to individuals under the consideration of “welfare” concept based on Atkinson’s social welfare function. Meanwhile, we employ six subjective indicators to build the non-economic welfare evaluation model of electric universal service by using the ideological connotation of prospect theory.
- (2)
The empirical analysis results show that the implementation effect of electric universal service in Yunnan province is satisfactory. The social welfare level of electric universal service for Yunnan rural areas has increased to 0.8940 in 2011 from 0.8143 in 2006, increasing by 9.79%. The economic welfare level has increased to 0.9641 in 2011 from 0.9432 in 2006, increasing by 2.21%. The non-economic welfare level has increased to 0.8239 in 2011 from 0.6854 in 2006, increasing by 20.21%. The implementation of electric universal service has significantly improved the welfare level.
- (3)
The sensitivity analysis results indicate that the impact degrees of indicators on the economic welfare of electric universal service show the same trend, with the absolute value of sensitivity coefficient of each indicator remaining at around 0.06; while those on non-economic welfare are different, with the sensitivity coefficient value ranging from 00796 to 0.3209, and “electric service realization degree” is the most sensitive factor. The policy related to electric universal service improves the individual living quality in remote and underdeveloped areas, which can further promote their sustainable development to some extent.
From the social welfare evaluation result of electric universal service, the Chinese government can identify the implementation effect of electric universal service, which can provide some reference for the relevant policy adjustment. Meanwhile, the proposed social welfare evaluation model of electric universal service has practicability and maneuverability, which can also be applied to other provinces.