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This volume brings together academic economists and lawyers to
evaluate and compare the regulation of telecommunications markets
in Germany and the United States. The unifying theme in all of the
pa pers is that the goal of public policy in this area should be to
make the broadest and most functional competition possible by means
of an ap propriate regulatory framework. Because the European and
American telecommunications markets are becoming more intertwined
each day, the issues addressed in this volume will be topical to
the business, government, and academic communities for some time.
For the chairman of the Monopoly Commission, Wernhard Moschel, the
opening of the German telecommunications market has been successful
in principle. This is clearly recognizable in the case of the
competition in long-distance transport. Based on the view that the
regulatory authority should make itself obsolete, Professor Moschel
advocates an incremental review and gradual reduction of
regulation."
This 1998 book addresses deregulatory policies that threaten to
reduce or destroy the value of private property in network
industries without any accompanying payment of just compensation,
policies that are termed 'deregulatory takings'. The authors
further consider the problem of renegotiation of the regulatory
contract, which changes the terms and conditions of operation of
utility companies. They argue that constitutional protections of
private property from takings, as well as efficient remedies for
contractual breach, provide the proper foundation for the
competitive transformation of the network industries. The benefits
of competition do not stem from government regulations that
redistribute income from utility investors to customers, nor do
such benefits stem from regulatory policies for network access that
promote free riding on incumbent facilities by entrants. Such
actions represent a new version of increased regulation, not
deregulation.
This volume brings together academic economists and lawyers to
evaluate and compare the regulation of telecommunications markets
in Germany and the United States. The unifying theme in all of the
pa pers is that the goal of public policy in this area should be to
make the broadest and most functional competition possible by means
of an ap propriate regulatory framework. Because the European and
American telecommunications markets are becoming more intertwined
each day, the issues addressed in this volume will be topical to
the business, government, and academic communities for some time.
For the chairman of the Monopoly Commission, Wernhard Moschel, the
opening of the German telecommunications market has been successful
in principle. This is clearly recognizable in the case of the
competition in long-distance transport. Based on the view that the
regulatory authority should make itself obsolete, Professor Moschel
advocates an incremental review and gradual reduction of
regulation."
This book addresses deregulatory policies that threaten to reduce or destroy the value of private property in network industries without any accompanying payment of just compensation, policies that are termed "deregulatory takings." The authors further consider the problem of renegotiation of the regulatory contract, which changes the terms and conditions of operation of utility companies. They argue that constitutional protections of private property from takings, as well as efficient remedies for contractual breach, provide the proper foundation for the competitive transformation of the network industries.
Influential industry and government leaders speak out on the first
major overhaul of US communications policy in over 60 years.
Contributors include: F. Duane Ackerman; William P. Barr; Thomas J.
Bliley; Paul W. MacAvoy; Richard D. McCormick; Gregory Sidak;
Robert D. Willig; and John D. Zeglis.
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