Network Competition and Interconnection with Heterogeneous Subscribers
This paper considers competition in a telecommunications industry, where heterogeneous consumers have private information about their preferences for telephone service and firms are allowed to use nonlinear tariffs. Networks, which directly compete for customers, are interconnected and pay access charges to one another. In a symmetric equilibrium, each network’s profit-maximising pricing policy generally involves a distortion in call allocation for all types, except when the (reciprocal) access charge is set equal to the call-termination cost. Under certain conditions, however, the resulting per-firm profit is independent of the access charge, and so the networks have no incentive to collude by choosing an access charge higher (or lower) than its cost. In this case, there is no need for regulatory intervention regarding access charges other than to provide a ‘focal point’ by recommending that the networks set access charges equal to the actual call-termination cost. This policy induces the efficient consumption of calls. Key Words : Two-way Networks, Interconnection, Nonlinear Pricing,Telecommunications Policy.
Published in International Journal of Industrial Organization, 2004, vol. 22, issue 5, pages 611-631. [ doi:10.1016/j.ijindorg.2004.01.002 ] The text is part of a series Keele University, Department of Economics Discussion Papers Number 2000/11 30 pages
Classification:
D43 - Oligopoly and Other Forms of Market Imperfection ; L43 - Legal Monopolies and Regulation or Deregulation ; L51 - Economics of Regulation ; L96 - Telecommunications