This paper examines the relative advantages of allocating spectrum by auction or without licensing. The debate over how to allocate the spectrum will at times rest fundamentally on the challenges of choosing between alternative technologies. This paper notes that economic benefits of a highly distributed and non-excludable technology, like Wi-Fi, may be higher than for an excludable technology, like mobile data, but that the bidding capacities of each technology can easily sway towards an excludable technology due to a highly distributed technology’s inability to appropriate gains and thus to reflect its underlying social gains in bids. This argument is developed specifically with respect to the upper 6 GHz band of spectrum. The paper argue...
Demand for spectrum—the government-controlled airwaves used to transmit wireless signals—is at an al...
Analysis of spectrum allocation policies in the economics literature focuses on competitive bidding ...
Demand for spectrum—the government-controlled airwaves used to transmit wireless signals—is at an al...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
TAlthough the current shortage of radio spectrum is usually attributed to the scarcity of spectrum, ...
This article provides an overview of auctions and proposes a bidding format for use in a potential s...
Wireless license auctions have successfully replaced “beauty contests ” in many countries. Competiti...
Access to the radio spectrum is vital for modern digital communication. It is an essential component...
We comment on the service and auction rules discussed in the Report and Order and Further Notice of ...
Wireless license auctions have successfully replaced “beauty contests” in many countries. Competiti...
Recently, United States, United Kingdom and EU are seeking efficient use of scarce spectrum resource...
Wireless license auctions have successfully replaced “beauty contests” in many countries. Competiti...
Demand for spectrum—the government-controlled airwaves used to transmit wireless signals—is at an al...
Analysis of spectrum allocation policies in the economics literature focuses on competitive bidding ...
Demand for spectrum—the government-controlled airwaves used to transmit wireless signals—is at an al...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
Auctions are used by many organizations to assign property rights for a wide variety of goods. In ou...
TAlthough the current shortage of radio spectrum is usually attributed to the scarcity of spectrum, ...
This article provides an overview of auctions and proposes a bidding format for use in a potential s...
Wireless license auctions have successfully replaced “beauty contests ” in many countries. Competiti...
Access to the radio spectrum is vital for modern digital communication. It is an essential component...
We comment on the service and auction rules discussed in the Report and Order and Further Notice of ...
Wireless license auctions have successfully replaced “beauty contests” in many countries. Competiti...
Recently, United States, United Kingdom and EU are seeking efficient use of scarce spectrum resource...
Wireless license auctions have successfully replaced “beauty contests” in many countries. Competiti...
Demand for spectrum—the government-controlled airwaves used to transmit wireless signals—is at an al...
Analysis of spectrum allocation policies in the economics literature focuses on competitive bidding ...
Demand for spectrum—the government-controlled airwaves used to transmit wireless signals—is at an al...