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Economists? Statement on U.S. Broadband Policy
Elizabeth E. Bailey, Martin Neil Baily, William J. Baumol, Peter Cramton, Gerald R. Faulhaber, Kenneth Flamm, Richard Gilbert, Austan Goolsbee, Shane Greenstein, Robert W. Hahn, Robert E. Hall, Thomas W. Hazlett, Alfred E. Kahn, Robert E. Litan, John Mayo, Paul Milgrom, Janusz A. Ordover, Robert S. Pindyck, Gregory L. Rosston, Scott J. Savage, Howard Shelanski, Richard L. Schmalensee, Pablo T. Spiller, David J. Teece, Hal R. Varian, Scott Wallsten, Dennis L. Weisman. Related Publication 06-06. Mar 2006.
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In this statement, a group of economists assembled by the AEI-Brookings Joint Center makes the following two recommendations to improve the competitive provision of broadband services. First, Congress should eliminate local franchising regulations, which serve as a barrier to new entry.  Second, Congress and the Federal Communications Commission should make more spectrum available to private parties and allow them to use it as they see fit or trade their licenses in the market, so that spectrum will go to its highest-valued uses.


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Broadband policy
Comment by: Knox
I am agreement that local franchising regulations are a barrier. Customers should be able to choose the products they buy and be able to refuse to purchase bundled programs. ...