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Date: 2024-08-16 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00004487

Books
Institutional and Legal Framework

The Need for Speed: A New Framework for Telecommunications Policy for the 21st Century by Robert E. Litan and Hal J. Singer

Burgess COMMENTARY

Peter Burgess

The Need for Speed: A New Framework for Telecommunications Policy for the 21st Century

by Robert E. Litan and Hal J. Singer

The twenty-first-century telecommunications landscape is radically different from the one that prevailed as recently as the last decade of the twentieth century. Robert Litan and Hal Singer argue that given the speed of innovation in this sector, the Federal Communications Commission’s outdated policies and rules are inhibiting investment in the telecom industry, specifically in fast broadband networks. The Need for Speed presents the kind of fundamental rethinking needed to bring communications policy in line with technological advances.

Fast broadband has huge societal benefits, enabling all kinds of applications in telemedicine, entertainment, retailing, education, and energy that would have been unthinkable a few years ago. Those benefits would be even greater if the FCC adopted policies that encouraged more broadband providers, especially wireless providers, to make their services available in roughly half of the country where consumers currently have no choice in wireline providers offering download speeds that satisfy the FCC’s current standards.

The authors’ recommendations include allowing broadband providers to charge for premium delivery services; embracing a rule-of-reason approach to all matters involving vertical arrangements; stripping the FCC of its merger review authority because both the Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department have the authority to stop anticompetitive mergers; eliminating the FCC’s ability to condition spectrum purchases on the identity, business plans, or spectrum holdings of a bidder; and freeing telephone companies from outdated regulations that require them to maintain both a legacy copper network and a modem IP network.

These changes and others advanced in The Need for Speed would greatly enhance consumer welfare with respect to telecommunications services and the applications built around them.

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