This Article concludes a series by these authors and Professors J. Gregory Sidak and Daniel F. Spulber, published last year in this journal. Here, Professors Baumol and Merrill address the issues surrounding the pricing of local phone services to long distance rivals, clarifying their points of agreement and disagreement with Sidak and Spulber. In their previous articles, Sidak and Spulber argued that the movement toward competition in local telephone service should be accompanied by substantial compensation to existing local telephone carriers, a view that Baumol and Merrill do not share. Rather, they note three points of disagreement between Sidak and Spulber and themselves. First, they maintain that Sidak and Spulber use an incorrect for...
In this Article, we examine the neglected tradeoff between innovation and mandatory unbundling of te...
In this piece, Baumol and Sidak respond to comments on their earlier essay on telecommunications tha...
Local telephone companies have long been regulated as natural monopolies. However, technological inn...
This Article concludes a series by these authors and Professors J. Gregory Sidak and Daniel F. Spulb...
As the United States and the other Western Industrialized Nations advance to the Twenty-first Centur...
The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System ...
Professors Baumol and Merrill reply to Deregulatory Takings and Breach of the Regulatory Contract, p...
One of the most distinctive developments in telecommunications policy over the past few decades has ...
This article challenges the conventional wisdom that the Telecommunications Act of 1996 is to blame ...
This article examines the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and Congress\u27 intent that it encourage n...
Although AT&T relinquished control of its local exchange carriers (LECs) in 1983, competition in the...
Over the last quarter century, significant changes have occurred in telecommunications. The breakup ...
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...
While the Telecommunications Act of 1996 has had a profound positive impact on many sectors of the c...
In this Article, we examine the neglected tradeoff between innovation and mandatory unbundling of te...
In this piece, Baumol and Sidak respond to comments on their earlier essay on telecommunications tha...
Local telephone companies have long been regulated as natural monopolies. However, technological inn...
This Article concludes a series by these authors and Professors J. Gregory Sidak and Daniel F. Spulb...
As the United States and the other Western Industrialized Nations advance to the Twenty-first Centur...
The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System ...
Professors Baumol and Merrill reply to Deregulatory Takings and Breach of the Regulatory Contract, p...
One of the most distinctive developments in telecommunications policy over the past few decades has ...
This article challenges the conventional wisdom that the Telecommunications Act of 1996 is to blame ...
This article examines the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and Congress\u27 intent that it encourage n...
Although AT&T relinquished control of its local exchange carriers (LECs) in 1983, competition in the...
Over the last quarter century, significant changes have occurred in telecommunications. The breakup ...
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...
While the Telecommunications Act of 1996 has had a profound positive impact on many sectors of the c...
In this Article, we examine the neglected tradeoff between innovation and mandatory unbundling of te...
In this piece, Baumol and Sidak respond to comments on their earlier essay on telecommunications tha...
Local telephone companies have long been regulated as natural monopolies. However, technological inn...