This paper responds to continuing arguments about the necessity for structural separation of the telecommunications local loop. It attempts to strike a balance by stressing that in fact a wide range of questions are yet to be answered. And the onus is fairly placed on the proponents of structural separation to provide persuasive answers proving that the drastic action they call for is necessary. In addition, many of the benefits of structural separation are unquantifiable and, indeed, conjectural, while the costs of this severe measure are more certain and substantial. Moreover, while seemingly simple in concept, there is a formidable range of difficulties relating to the implementation of structural separation
Abstract: Numerous proposals have been made for separation in the telecommunications sector, some of...
Numerous proposals have been made for separation in the telecommunications sector, some of which hav...
The LoopCo Plan, which uses market mechanisms to promote competition, is the best approach to restru...
n recent years, competition authorities and telecommunications regulators have indicated an increasi...
As the United States and the other Western Industrialized Nations advance to the Twenty-first Centur...
Strutural separation is a recurring issue in debate over telecommunications regulation. Some general...
Although competitive local exchange carriers ( CLECs ) collectively have gained considerable market ...
The past four years have seen renewed interest in the role that structural remedies could play in sh...
This paper presents a basic framework to assess whether structural (vertical) separation is desirabl...
The provision of local access in telecommunications looks likely to remain, predominantly, in the ha...
In the lead up to the review of telecommunications regulation in mid 2006, the European Unions Commi...
Interconnection is necessary for competition in telephony, but interconnection agree-ments are diffi...
Since rising to prominence in the UK, functional separation has been widely discussed as a way to ad...
The paper tackles the discussion about vertical separation in the electronic communications sector, ...
A critical issue in the context of telecommunications market openness is the access to the local net...
Abstract: Numerous proposals have been made for separation in the telecommunications sector, some of...
Numerous proposals have been made for separation in the telecommunications sector, some of which hav...
The LoopCo Plan, which uses market mechanisms to promote competition, is the best approach to restru...
n recent years, competition authorities and telecommunications regulators have indicated an increasi...
As the United States and the other Western Industrialized Nations advance to the Twenty-first Centur...
Strutural separation is a recurring issue in debate over telecommunications regulation. Some general...
Although competitive local exchange carriers ( CLECs ) collectively have gained considerable market ...
The past four years have seen renewed interest in the role that structural remedies could play in sh...
This paper presents a basic framework to assess whether structural (vertical) separation is desirabl...
The provision of local access in telecommunications looks likely to remain, predominantly, in the ha...
In the lead up to the review of telecommunications regulation in mid 2006, the European Unions Commi...
Interconnection is necessary for competition in telephony, but interconnection agree-ments are diffi...
Since rising to prominence in the UK, functional separation has been widely discussed as a way to ad...
The paper tackles the discussion about vertical separation in the electronic communications sector, ...
A critical issue in the context of telecommunications market openness is the access to the local net...
Abstract: Numerous proposals have been made for separation in the telecommunications sector, some of...
Numerous proposals have been made for separation in the telecommunications sector, some of which hav...
The LoopCo Plan, which uses market mechanisms to promote competition, is the best approach to restru...