Book Details
Description
An empirical approach to understanding telecommunications regulation based on the use of a sophisticated engineering cost proxy model.
The telecommunications industry defies easy characterization. The long-distance sector is highly competitive and the local exchange sector much less so, while digital transmission and switching have blurred the distinction between traditional voice communication and the transmission of video and data messages. Regulation of this industry has generally been considered necessary because it has aspects of a natural monopoly.
This book takes an empirical approach to natural monopoly and the need for regulation of telecommunications. The centerpiece of the analysis is a sophisticated engineering cost proxy model, the local exchange cost optimization model (LECOM). The book, which is largely methodological, shows that a combination of LECOM, econometrics, and simulations can aid policy discussion of such contentious issues as incentive regulation, natural monopolies, estimating the cost of interconnection among networks, and the obligation of universal service. The book presents a theoretical framework to explain the incentives of firms and the power of regulation and then uses LECOM to test the theoretical implications. The work is unusual in that it applies the foundations of regulation theory to a model of an industry rather than applying econometric theory to historical cost data. The book includes a CD-ROM containing the data set the authors used to analyze their model.
About Author(s)
Farid Gasmi is Professor of Economics at the Université de Toulouse.D. Mark Kennet is Associate Professor of Telecommunications at George Washington UniversityJean-Jacques Laffont was Professor of Economics at the Université des Sciences Sociales de Toulouse and the Institut Universitaire de France and Director of the Institut d'Economie Industrielle.William W. Sharkey is a Senior Economist at the Federal Communications Commission.
Content
Preface
1 Introduction
2 The Local Exchange Cost Optimization Model ( Lecom )
3 The Use of LECOM under Complete Information
4 Regulation under Incomplete Information
5 The Natural Monopoly Test
6 Optimal Regulation of a Natural Monopoly
7 Comparison of performance of Incentive and Traditional
8 Universal Service
9 Strategic Cross-Subsidies and Vertical Integration
10 Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
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