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Broadband: Should We Regulate High-Speed Internet Access?
Robert W. Crandall (Editor), James H. Alleman (Editor). Books and Monographs. Dec 2002.
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There is widespread concern in the telecommunications industry that public policy may be impeding the continued development of the Internet into a high-speed communications network. In the absence of ubiquitous, high-speed ?broadband? Internet connections for residential and small-business customers, the demand for IT equipment and new Internet service applications may stagnate.

Broadband policy is controversial in large part because of the differences in the regulatory regimes faced by different types of carriers. Cable television companies face neither retail price regulation of their cable modem services nor any requirements to make their facilities available to competitors. Local telephone companies, on the other hand, face both retail price regulation for their DSL service and a requirement imposed by the 1996 Telecommunications Act that they ?unbundle? their network facilities and lease them to rivals. Finally, new entrants are largely unregulated, but many rely on facilities leased from the incumbent telephone companies at regulated rates to connect to their customers. This asymmetric regulation is the focus of this volume, in which telecommunications scholars address the public policy issues that have arisen over the deployment of new high-speed telecommunications services.

 Full text (345 pages)

 Foreword and Table of Contents

 Chapter 1: Introduction 
                    James H. Alleman and Robert W. Crandall

 Chapter 2: Broadband Mysteries
                    Bruce M. Owen

 Chapter 3: The Demand for Bandwidth: Evidence from the INDEX Project 
                    Hal R. Varian

 Chapter 4: The Demand for Broadband: Access, Content, and the Value of Time 
                    Paul N. Rappoport, Donald J. Kridel, and Lester D. Taylor

 Chapter 5: Wired High-Speed Access 
                    Charles L. Jackson

 Chapter 6: From 2G to 3G: Wireless Competition for Internet-Related Services 
                    Jerry Hausman

 Chapter 7: Internet-Related Services: The Results of Asymmetric Regulation 
                    Jerry Hausman

 Chapter 8: Competition and Regulation in Broadband Communications 
                    Howard A. Shelanski

 Chapter 9: Regulation and Vertical Integration in Broadband Access Supply 
                    Thomas W. Hazlett

 Chapter 10: Broadband Deployment: Is Policy in the Way? 
                     Gerald R. Faulhaber

 Chapter 11: The Financial Effects of Broadband Regulation 
                      George Bittlingmayer and Thomas W. Hazlett

 Chapter 12: Subsidies, the Value of Broadband, and the Importance of Fixed Costs
                      Austan Goolsbee

 Chapter 13: The Benefits of Broadband and the Effect of Regulation 
                      Robert W. Crandall, Robert W. Hahn, and Timothy J. Tardiff

 Index 

(Purchase hard-copy version of this book.)


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