The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System assigned long-distance and equipment manufacturing to AT\u26T while forbidding the Regional Bell Operating Companies from entering these lines of business. These restrictions were justified by arguments that the local exchange network was a natural monopoly, that the carriers benefited from barriers to entry, that they could leverage their monopoly power into other markets, and that they would use revenues from local service to subsidize their entry into other lines of business. In this Article, Professor Spulber shows that these arguments are no longer valid because of technological and market changes in the telecommunications industry
Over the last quarter century, significant changes have occurred in telecommunications. The breakup ...
The telecommunications industry has been affected by innovation and technological changes. Technolog...
The competitive transformation of telecommunications and other network industries in the United Stat...
The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System ...
As the United States and the other Western Industrialized Nations advance to the Twenty-first Centur...
This paper examines the justifications, history, and practice of regulation in the US telecommunicat...
For the past several decades, U.S. policymakers and the courts have charged a largely deregulatory c...
This article challenges the conventional wisdom that the Telecommunications Act of 1996 is to blame ...
This Article explains the monopoly rationale for conventional approaches to telecommunications regul...
The telecommunications industry is changing so fundamentally as to eliminate structures that define ...
This article discusses changes in the U.S. telecommunications market over the last decade and argues...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 contained the promise of a deregulated national telecommunication...
Natural monopoly theory fails to provide a credible reason for regulation. Before regulation, compet...
Congress finally began the long-needed process of comprehensive telecommunication deregulation in 19...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 has yielded more litigation and less local competition than its s...
Over the last quarter century, significant changes have occurred in telecommunications. The breakup ...
The telecommunications industry has been affected by innovation and technological changes. Technolog...
The competitive transformation of telecommunications and other network industries in the United Stat...
The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System ...
As the United States and the other Western Industrialized Nations advance to the Twenty-first Centur...
This paper examines the justifications, history, and practice of regulation in the US telecommunicat...
For the past several decades, U.S. policymakers and the courts have charged a largely deregulatory c...
This article challenges the conventional wisdom that the Telecommunications Act of 1996 is to blame ...
This Article explains the monopoly rationale for conventional approaches to telecommunications regul...
The telecommunications industry is changing so fundamentally as to eliminate structures that define ...
This article discusses changes in the U.S. telecommunications market over the last decade and argues...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 contained the promise of a deregulated national telecommunication...
Natural monopoly theory fails to provide a credible reason for regulation. Before regulation, compet...
Congress finally began the long-needed process of comprehensive telecommunication deregulation in 19...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 has yielded more litigation and less local competition than its s...
Over the last quarter century, significant changes have occurred in telecommunications. The breakup ...
The telecommunications industry has been affected by innovation and technological changes. Technolog...
The competitive transformation of telecommunications and other network industries in the United Stat...