Title: ECO 235 Economics of Telecommunication
1ECO 235 Economics of Telecommunication
- Dr. David Loomis
- Department of Economics
- Illinois State University
2What do we do about Monopolies?
- Uncontrolled monopolies have higher prices and
less output than perfect competition - They have productive inefficiencies and
allocative inefficiencies - Therefore we need government intervention in the
form of regulation
3Types of Regulation
- Antitrust Policy - seeks to protect consumers
from anticompetitive behavior through the
judicial system - Direct Regulation or Economic Regulation -
controls pricing and/or output due to the belief
that the industry is inherently
4Types of Regulation
- Social Regulation - controls undesirable
consequences of firm behavior to obtain various
social goods such as clean air and water, safe
products and workplaces
5Regulating Telecommunications
- Rate-of-Return Regulation
6Rate -of-Return Regulation (ROR)
- Regulators constrain total earnings and revenues
(formula) - They determine a fair rate of return a "used and
useful" rate base and "just and reasonable" rates
7Reasons against ROR
- Gold-plating - "pad the rate base
- Non-cost-based pricing of services causes
distorted economic signals - Hinders innovation
- Very Costly - 1 billion annually
8Telecommunication Technology
9Network Technology - Why Switching?
- Suppose 4 people want to call each other. The
number of lines needed would be 6.
10 11 12Efficiencies of a Switch
13Public Network Terminology
14Public Network Terminology
15Cost Characteristics of the Public Switched
Network
- Production facilities have well-defined
capacities cost of operation is independent of
usage of those facilities. Variable costs are
small. - Network parts are used in joint production of
several products and services. - Marginal cost of making a local (unmeasured) call
is very small less than a penny. - Traditionally considered to be a NATURAL monopoly
16Natural Monopoly
- When one firm can produce all the market output
more cheaply than 2 or more firms - Economies of Scale
- Economies of Scope
17Marginal Cost Pricing?
- In telecom, there are significant economies of
large-scale production - In an industry with economies of scale, the LRAC
curve is downward sloping - If average cost is declining, then the MC is
below AC - if prices were set equal to marginal cost, the
firms would go bankrupt
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19Incentive Problem
- assume regulator prices at PATC and firm earns
no economic profit. - No incentive to cut costs - increasing costs lead
to increasing prices
20Demand Characteristics of the Public Switched
Network
- Individual demand can be random, but market
demand had regular daily and weekly patterns.
Highest in late morning and mid-afternoon. - Calls to one location can't be substituted for
calls to another.
21Positive network externality
- the value of the network to a given user
increases with the number of users who have
access to it. - Definition - Positive Externality - Result of an
activity that causes incidental benefits to
others with no compensating compensation provided
to or paid by those who generate the externality).
22Benefits of Interconnection
- Because of network externalities, interconnecting
two separate networks increases the value of
both. - Example, early days of e-mail, MCI mail, and
CompuServe customers could only send messages to
other subscribers of that network. Internet's
interconnectivity allowed all mail systems to
talk to each other.
23Public policy of Interconnection
- "A dominant theme in telecommunication policy is
defining the rights and responsibilities for the
interconnection of networks and the appropriate
payments for interconnection under a wide variety
of different conditions. Brock p. 62
24Back to Demand Characteristics
- Demand for network access is inelastic
- Local calling is inelastic
- LD calls more elastic but still less than 1.
- Residential demand is more elastic than business
customers' demand.
25Definition of elasticity of demand
- change in quantity demanded divided by change
in price. - If gt1, elastic.
- If lt1, inelastic
- If 1, unit elastic.
- Increase in price causes TR to increase if
inelastic, decrease if elastic and stay the same
if unit elastic.
26Calling Party Pays
- In landline network, traditionally the calling
party pays for the whole call and the called
party pays nothing even though it receives a
benefit. - In wireless, you pay for both sending a receiving
calls. - 800/888 numbers - called party pays
27Revenue Sharing
- Revenue sharing arrangements for LD call -
customer paid single charge to originating telco
and revenue was divided among the companies
participating in the call.
28 Market Structure Today
- Key to understanding market structure is LATAs
- LATA - Local Access and Transport areas -
created at the divestiture of ATT, these are
areas that the RBOCs are precluded from operating
outside of. (map of IL LATAs)
29Types of Calls
- Local calls - defined by company regulated by
state commission - Intra-LATA calls - "toll" calls - calls that
originate and terminate within the same LATA.
Usually defaults to the local telephone company.
Some states allow competition. Regulated by state
regulatory commissions. - InterLATA intrastate calls - calls that originate
and terminate in different LATAs but are still
within the same state. Regulated by state
regulatory commissions.
30Types of Calls
- InterLATA interstate calls - calls that originate
and terminate in different LATAs and states.
Regulated by the FCC. - Local telcos provide access to the local network
to IXCs for interLATA calls. This is called
"switched access". Access for intrastate switched
access is regulated by state interstate is
regulated by FCC.
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32Company types Local Exchange Companies (LECs)
- 7 RBOCS - NYNEX Bell Atlantic, Bell South, SBC
(formerly Southwestern Bell), Ameritech, US West,
Pacific Telesis. - In 1982, 25 Bell Operating companies served 81
of the phone lines but only 41 of the assigned
geographic territory in the U.S. (Brock p. 65) - Large "independents" - GTE, Sprint Local
(Centel), SNET, thousands of small independents - A total of 1,432 independent telcos served the
remaining 59 of the territory but provided only
19 of the telephone lines. (Brock p. 65)
33Company types - Interexchange carriers (IXCs)
- Traditional Long Distance Carriers - ATT
MCI/Worldcom, Sprint, Qwest, and thousands of
resellers.
342001 Market Share of IXCs
35Company types
- CAPs Competitive Access Providers
- ALTs Alternate Local Transport companies
- CLECs Competitive Local Exchange Companies
- Started by supplying high-speed data and voice in
local market to large business - MFS, Teleport, Eastern Telelogic
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