Competition in Telecommunications

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1999-11-01
Publisher(s): Mit Pr
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Summary

Theoretical models based on the assumption that telecommunications is a natural monopoly no longer reflect reality. As a result, policymakers often lack the guidance of economic theorists. Competition in Telecommunicationsis written in a style accessible to managers, consultants, government officials, and others. Jean-Jacques Laffont and Jean Tirole analyze regulatory reform and the emergence of competition in network industries using the state-of-the-art theoretical tools of industrial organization, political economy, and the economics of incentives. The book opens with background information for the reader who is unfamiliar with current issues in the telecommunications industry. The following sections focus on four central aspects of the recent deregulatory movement: the introduction of incentive regulation; one-way access (access given by a local network to the providers of complementary segments, such as long-distance or information services); the special nature of competition in an industry requiring two-way access (whereby competing networks depend on the mutual termination of calls); and universal service, in particular the two leading contenders for the competitively neutral provision of universal service: the use of engineering models to compute subsidies and the design of universal service auctions. The book concludes with a discussion of the Internet and regulatory institutions. Copublished with the Center for Economic Studies and the Ifo Institute

Table of Contents

Series Foreword vii
Laudation for Jean Tirole ix
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xvii
Setting the Stage
1(36)
Introduction
1(8)
A Brief Guided Tour through the Telecommunications Industry
9(7)
Regulatory Reforms
16(21)
Incentive Regulation
37(60)
Economic Principles: Performance-Based Regulation
38(22)
Economic Principles: Pricing Services to the Consumer
60(24)
Practical Aspects
84(13)
Essential Facility and One-Way Access: Theory
97(40)
Background
97(3)
Economic Principles
100(24)
Refining the Theory: Lack of Instruments and Multiple Goals for Interconnection Charges
124(7)
Two Specific Concerns and Some Common Misperceptions about Ramsey Access Pricing
131(6)
Essential Facility and One-Way Access: Policy
137(42)
General Issues for the Design of Access Policies
137(4)
Backward-Looking Cost-Based Pricing of Access
141(3)
Regulated and Deregulated Segments: The Problem of Cross-Subsidies
144(4)
Forward-Looking Cost-Based Pricing of Access
148(13)
Cost-Based Access Pricing and Exclusion
161(5)
ECPR and Its Applications
166(4)
Global Price Cap
170(3)
Global Price Cap and Incentives to Exclude
173(6)
Multiple Bottlenecks and Two-Way Access with Patrick Rey
179(38)
Background
179(5)
Ineffectiveness of Noncooperative Access Price Setting
184(3)
Do Wholesale Agreements Promote Retail Collusion? The Patent Pool Analogy
187(2)
Application to Two-Way Access Pricing in Telecommunications
189(7)
Four Reasons Why High Access Charges May Not Facilitate Collusion
196(11)
Unbundling- and Facilities-Based Entry
207(6)
Alternative Policies
213(4)
Universal Service
217(48)
The Need for a New Paradigm
217(2)
The Foundations of Universal Service
219(12)
The U.S. Telecommunications Act of 1996 and Universal Service Obligations
231(12)
Universal Service Auctions
243(22)
Concluding Remarks
265(16)
Internet and Internet Telephony
265(7)
Regulatory Institutions
272(9)
Glossary 281(8)
References 289(10)
Index 299

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