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Competition and Chaos - U.S. Telecommunications since the 1996 Telecom Act (Paperback)
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Competition and Chaos - U.S. Telecommunications since the 1996 Telecom Act (Paperback)
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"The 1996 Telecommunications Act was an attempt to increase
competition among telecommunications providers in the United States
by reducing regulatory barriers to market entry. This competition
was expected to drive innovation in the telecommunications sector
and reap economic benefits for both American consumers and
telecommunications providers. The legislation, however, had a
markedly different impact. While many of the more aggressive
providers enjoyed sharp short-term rises in stock market values,
they soon faced sudden collapse, leaving consumers with little or
no long-term benefit. In Competition and Chaos, Robert W. Crandall
analyzes the impact of the 1996 act on economic welfare in the
United States and how the act and its antecedents affected the
major telecommunications providers. He argues that the act was far
too stringent, inviting the Federal Communications Commission and
state regulators to micromanage competitive entry into local
telecommunications markets. Combined with the bursting of the
dot.com and telecom stock market bubbles, this aggressive policy
invited new and existing firms to invest billions of dollars
unwisely, leading to the 2001-02 collapse of equity values
throughout the sector. New entrants into the market invested more
than $50 billion in unproductive assets that were quickly wiped out
through massive failures. The 1996 act allowed the independent
long-distance companies, such as MCI and AT&T, to live a few
years longer. But today they are a threatened species, caught in a
downward spiral of declining prices and substantial losses. The
industry is preparing for an intense battle for market share among
three sets of carriers: the wireless companies, the local telephone
carriers, and the cable television businesses. Each has its own
particular advantage in one of the three major segments of the
market-voice, data, and video-but none is assured a clear path to
dominance. Although the telecom stock market collapse is now
history and the survivors are investing once again, Crandall
concludes that the regulators have failed to adapt to the chaos to
which they contributed. "
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