The endless need for regulation in telecommunication: An explanation
Telecommunication services have existed as a legal monopoly nearly throughout its entire history. In 1998, telecom market liberalisation was achieved across the European Union (EU) through the introduction of competition among telephone services. Asymmetrical obligations were deemed necessary in order to compensate the market power of the former monopolist. As the evolution of asymmetrical regulation in Spain illustrates, obligations and the telecommunications operators subject to them increased with the regulatory framework established in 2002 in the EU. This new regulatory framework may continue to expand through the inclusion of functional separation as another possible asymmetrical obligation. In short, it seems that the regulatory pressure on the telecommunications industry is increasing, despite the lapse in time since the liberalisation of the industry. In this paper, a methodology developed by the Austrian School of Economics is applied in order to explain why the telecommunication market is subject to increasing regulation in Europe, rather than deregulation, after more than 10 years of liberalisation. In particular, Mises's theory of price control is used to explain the evolution of the regulation of local loop unbundling.
Authors: | Herrera-González, Fernando ; Castejón-Martín, Luis |
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Published in: |
Telecommunications Policy. - Elsevier, ISSN 0308-5961. - Vol. 33, 10-11, p. 664-675
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Regulation Theory of price control Significant market power Functional separation Austrian economics |
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