
Deregulating Telecommunications
The Baby Bells Case for Competition
Wiley (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 28. September 1995
Book
Hardback
225 pages
978-0-471-96295-3 (ISBN)
Description
In 1984, the Department of Justice settled its antitrust caseagainst AT&T. The agreement, embedded in the Modification ofFinal Judgment, led to a divestiture of the local telephoneexchanges from AT&T to the Regional Bell Operating Companies(known as the Baby Bells ). This agreement gave unprecedented powerover a major US industry to one man, Judge Harold Greene of the USDistrict Court of the District of Columbia. The Baby Bells couldnot enter any line of business without approval from Judge Greene.With technological change it became increasingly desirable for theBaby Bells to enter different lines of business, but each attemptwas subject to legal challenge and lengthy, costly litigation. In1994, the Baby Bells mounted a major legal challenge to theModification of Final Judgement (MFJ). As part of their strategy,they asked leading scholars in the field to examine the costs andbenefits of the MFJ and provide evidence in the form of affidavitsregarding its effect. Using a cost-benefit framework, theconclusion of the analysis is that the MFJ should be vacated andcompetition should be allowed in the industry. DeregulatingTelecommunications draws together a group of leading practitionersand academics in the fields of regulation, industrial organisationand antitrust to explore:
A cost-benefit analysis of the 1984 AT&T antitrust settlement
Theoretical and empirical studies that analyse the results of thesettlement from its inception in 1984 to 1994
An explanation for the recent policy decisions to reduce theamount of regulation in telecommunications
Analysis vital to predicting the results of any deregulation intelecommunications in the future
This book will prove invaluable to economists interested intelecommunications, as well as those interested in antitrust and in regulation.
A cost-benefit analysis of the 1984 AT&T antitrust settlement
Theoretical and empirical studies that analyse the results of thesettlement from its inception in 1984 to 1994
An explanation for the recent policy decisions to reduce theamount of regulation in telecommunications
Analysis vital to predicting the results of any deregulation intelecommunications in the future
This book will prove invaluable to economists interested intelecommunications, as well as those interested in antitrust and in regulation.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 642 mm
Width: 498 mm
Thickness: 67 mm
Weight
735 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-471-96295-3 (9780471962953)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Richard S. Higgins is the author of Deregulating Telecommunications: The Baby Bells Case for Competition, published by Wiley.
Paul Harold Rubin is an American economist and the Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Economics at Emory University. He was President of the Southern Economic Association in 2012-2013. He is also a research fellow at The Independent Institute.
Paul Harold Rubin is an American economist and the Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Economics at Emory University. He was President of the Southern Economic Association in 2012-2013. He is also a research fellow at The Independent Institute.
Content
Partial table of contents:
THE BASIS FOR THE MFJ, 1984 AND 1994.
The MFJ: An Imperfect Solution (P. Temin).
The Competitive Effects of Line-of-Business Restrictions inTelecommunications (K. Arrow, et al.).
BENEFITS OF REMOVING THE MFJ LINE OF BUSINESS RESTRICTIONS.
Vertical Integration and Regulation in the Telephone Industry (A.Alchian).
The Benefits of Releasing the Bell Companies from the InterexchangeRestrictions (P. Brandon & R. Schmalensee).
Realignment in Telecommunications (M. Maloney & R.McCormick).
THE POTENTIAL COSTS OF REMOVING THE LINE-OF-BUSINESSRESTRICTIONS.
Deterring Predation in Telecommunications: Are Line-of-BusinessRestraints Needed?
(S. Gates, et al.).
Empirical Tests of RBOC Leveraging and Cross-Subsidization (R.Higgins & M. McDonald).
THE BASIS FOR THE MFJ, 1984 AND 1994.
The MFJ: An Imperfect Solution (P. Temin).
The Competitive Effects of Line-of-Business Restrictions inTelecommunications (K. Arrow, et al.).
BENEFITS OF REMOVING THE MFJ LINE OF BUSINESS RESTRICTIONS.
Vertical Integration and Regulation in the Telephone Industry (A.Alchian).
The Benefits of Releasing the Bell Companies from the InterexchangeRestrictions (P. Brandon & R. Schmalensee).
Realignment in Telecommunications (M. Maloney & R.McCormick).
THE POTENTIAL COSTS OF REMOVING THE LINE-OF-BUSINESSRESTRICTIONS.
Deterring Predation in Telecommunications: Are Line-of-BusinessRestraints Needed?
(S. Gates, et al.).
Empirical Tests of RBOC Leveraging and Cross-Subsidization (R.Higgins & M. McDonald).