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Telecommunications Deregulation - Market Power and Cost Allocation Issues (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,845
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Telecommunications Deregulation - Market Power and Cost Allocation Issues (Hardcover, New)
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Since the breakup of AT&T in the early 1980s, many scholars and
others have argued that telecommunications regulatory policy,
especially at the state level, must change dramatically to fit new
market conditions. To others, particularly state regulators,
lawmakers, and smaller competitors, the proper response is one of
slow, incremental change in regulatory policy. This volume explores
these issues by using a unique multidisciplinary lens to focus on
the problems of market power and cost allocation in long distance
telecommunications markets. The contributors approach the subject
from the traditional perspectives of economics and law but also
incorporate developments in newer disciplines such as operations
research, decision theory, policy analysis, and corporate strategy.
Each section includes a series of main papers as well as critical
reviews by scholars using methodologies from other disciplines. The
result is an unusually comprehensive treatment of the complex
regulatory issues facing the telecommunications industry today. The
volume is divided into two primary sections which deal with market
power and cost allocation in turn. The first part opens with a
paper which examines market power from the perspective of legal
analytics. Two economists then employ the methodologies of
antitrust law and economics to survey the approaches of various
states to the problem of identifying telecommunications market
power. The third main paper in this section analyzes the market
power concept from the particular economic perspective of
contestable market theory. Turning to cost allocation issues, the
contributors argue for the applicability to long distance markets
of a new cost allocation methodology developed by NRRI for local
exchange service. The topic is then approached by using a series of
regulatory fables in which various possible incentive schemes are
used to induce supposedly efficient behavior, with cost allocation
as a resulting side issue. Each main paper is followed by one or
more critical discussant papers. Finally, contributor Alfred Kahn
draws on his long experience as a scholar and regulator to examine
the current problems of telecommunications regulation in their
historical context and to make some predictions about the future
course of regulation in the industry. An important contribution to
the business literature, this volume is a must acquisition for any
library dealing with the telecommunication industry.
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