This paper presents results from a calibrated welfare model of the UK mobile telephony market which includes many mobile networks; calls to and from the fixed network; networkbased price discrimination; and call externalities. The analysis focuses on the short-run effects of adopting lower mobile termination rates (MTRs) on total welfare, consumer surplus and profits. Our simulations show that reducing MTRs broadly in line with the recent European Commission Recommendation to either “long-run incremental cost”; reciprocal termination charges with fixed networks; or “bill-and-keep” (i.e. zero termination rates), increases social welfare, consumer surplus and networks’ profits. Depending on the strength of call externalities, social welfare m...
We discuss policy towards mobile call termination, illustrated by the 2002 Competi-tion Commission e...
When a person uses the traditional wireline telephone network to call another person on his cell pho...
The conventional wisdom that mobile operators are able to act as monopolists in pricing call termina...
This paper presents results from a calibrated welfare model of the UK mobile telephony market which ...
We present a calibrated model of the UK mobile telephony market with four mobile networks; calls to...
We present a calibrated model of the UK mobile telephony market with four mobile networks; calls to ...
This paper surveys the recent literature on competition between mobile network operators in the pres...
We examine the e¤ects of mobile termination rate regulation in asymmetric oligopolies. We do ...
We discuss policy towards mobile call termination, illustrated by the 2002 Competition Commission en...
This paper surveys the recent literature on competition between mobile networks in the pres-ence of ...
We re-examine the literature on mobile termination in the presence of network externalities. Externa...
We re-consider the impact that regulation of call termination on mobile phones has had on mobile cus...
This paper discusses aspects of recent policy towards mobile telephony in the U.K., including (i) th...
Interconnection rates are a key variable in telecommunications markets. Every call that is placed mu...
Motivated by recent UK experience, we study the problem of mobile call termination. This is an intri...
We discuss policy towards mobile call termination, illustrated by the 2002 Competi-tion Commission e...
When a person uses the traditional wireline telephone network to call another person on his cell pho...
The conventional wisdom that mobile operators are able to act as monopolists in pricing call termina...
This paper presents results from a calibrated welfare model of the UK mobile telephony market which ...
We present a calibrated model of the UK mobile telephony market with four mobile networks; calls to...
We present a calibrated model of the UK mobile telephony market with four mobile networks; calls to ...
This paper surveys the recent literature on competition between mobile network operators in the pres...
We examine the e¤ects of mobile termination rate regulation in asymmetric oligopolies. We do ...
We discuss policy towards mobile call termination, illustrated by the 2002 Competition Commission en...
This paper surveys the recent literature on competition between mobile networks in the pres-ence of ...
We re-examine the literature on mobile termination in the presence of network externalities. Externa...
We re-consider the impact that regulation of call termination on mobile phones has had on mobile cus...
This paper discusses aspects of recent policy towards mobile telephony in the U.K., including (i) th...
Interconnection rates are a key variable in telecommunications markets. Every call that is placed mu...
Motivated by recent UK experience, we study the problem of mobile call termination. This is an intri...
We discuss policy towards mobile call termination, illustrated by the 2002 Competi-tion Commission e...
When a person uses the traditional wireline telephone network to call another person on his cell pho...
The conventional wisdom that mobile operators are able to act as monopolists in pricing call termina...