The 1996 Telecommunications Act opened the monopolistic U.S. local telephone industry to new entrants. However, substantial entry costs have prevented some markets from becoming competitive. We study various subsidy policies designed to encourage entry. We estimate a dynamic entry game using data on both potential and actual entrants, allowing for heterogeneous option values of waiting. We find that subsidies to smaller markets are more cost-effective in reducing monopoly markets, but subsidies to only lower-cost firms are less cost-effective than a nondiscriminatory policy. Subsidies in only early periods reduce the option value of waiting and accelerate the arrival of competition
One of the most important and most contentious issues for regulation and competition raised by the 1...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
Natural monopoly theory fails to provide a credible reason for regulation. Before regulation, compet...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/115904/1/rand12109.pdfhttp://deepblue.l...
We estimate a dynamic oligopoly entry game in the early U.S. local telephone market. We observe the ...
There is general concern that producer subsidies distort competition. We examine a telecommunication...
Rosston and Brad Wimmer for providing us data on ILECs. All errors are our responsibility. The autho...
The authors examine the role of differentiation strategies for entry behavior in markets for local t...
We examine the role of differentiation strategies in the evolution of local telecommunication compet...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
Local telecommunications competition was an important goal of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. We ev...
Local telecommunications competition was an important goal of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. We ev...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
There is growing sentiment that rate rebalancing to eliminate cross subsidies between local business...
Deregulation of the telecommunications industry has led to a phenomenal growth in mobile phone servi...
One of the most important and most contentious issues for regulation and competition raised by the 1...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
Natural monopoly theory fails to provide a credible reason for regulation. Before regulation, compet...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/115904/1/rand12109.pdfhttp://deepblue.l...
We estimate a dynamic oligopoly entry game in the early U.S. local telephone market. We observe the ...
There is general concern that producer subsidies distort competition. We examine a telecommunication...
Rosston and Brad Wimmer for providing us data on ILECs. All errors are our responsibility. The autho...
The authors examine the role of differentiation strategies for entry behavior in markets for local t...
We examine the role of differentiation strategies in the evolution of local telecommunication compet...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
Local telecommunications competition was an important goal of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. We ev...
Local telecommunications competition was an important goal of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. We ev...
We extend Bresnahan and Reiss’s (1991) model of local oligopoly to allow firm entry and exit over ti...
There is growing sentiment that rate rebalancing to eliminate cross subsidies between local business...
Deregulation of the telecommunications industry has led to a phenomenal growth in mobile phone servi...
One of the most important and most contentious issues for regulation and competition raised by the 1...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
Natural monopoly theory fails to provide a credible reason for regulation. Before regulation, compet...