İşlem Maliyetleri Teorisi Çerçevesinde Türkiye'de Bağımsız Düzenleyici Kurullar
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Date
2018Author
Eraslan Hızlı, Özlem
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The aim of this study is to analyze independent regulatory agencies (IRAs) in Turkey from the
perspective of transaction costs theory. In this respect, first of all a large literature scanning has
been made regarding transaction costs theory. The concepts of "transaction" and "transaction
cost" have been discussed with respect to IRAs. Critics about transaction costs theory and
ampirical studies regarding the theory have also been taken into account.
An important contribution of the thesis is to analyze the transaction costs specific to IRAs by
dividing into subcategories from the viewpoint of transaction costs theory. In this context,
transaction costs related to IRAs are discussed under the titles of costs arising from regulatory
commitment, political transaction costs, transaction costs stemming from regulatory capture of
IRAs as a result of time cycles and transaction costs that emerge in regulatory process.
Another contribution of the thesis is to analyze transaction costs of IRAs currently operating in
Turkey under the specific conditions of our country. At this point, the problem of regulatory
commitment in Turkey; political transaction costs analyzed under the subtitles of how these
institutions are perceived by the governments, discussions made at the Turkish Grand National
Assembly, point of view of the EU towards IRAs in Turkey as a supranational institution,
sources created in order to finance IRAs in Turkey and interventions to the transfer of authority
to IRAs; operational costs of IRAs and how these institutions are located in the central
administration budget are discussed. In this way, the realisation of the costs of these institutions
to the public and central budget are analyzed.
Finally, the thesis puts forth transaction costs in the Turkish banking sector in a concrete way
and presents a road map suggesting a methodology that can be adapted by Turkish IRAs to the
relevant sectors that they regulate in order to calculate transaction costs and to assess their
results.