Classroom Companion: Business
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Introduction to Digital Economics
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- 22.2 Mobile Network Regulations
- 22.2.1 Fair Competition
Chapter 22 · Digital Regulation 337 22 chapter examines more deeply the regulation of mobile communications and the Internet. These are regulations by law. 7 Section 22.4 reviews how social norms, the marketplace itself, and technology also contribute to regulate the market. 22.2 Mobile Network Regulations The most comprehensive overview of regulations of the ICT market is the Telecommunications Regulation Handbook (Black & Srivastava, 2011 ). This section and the next are based on this source and rules applied by the Norwegian Communications Authority (Nkom) (Nkom, 2017 ). The main motive for regulating the mobile market is to build the foundation for a competitive market—or in other words, to avoid market dominance by one oper- ator and to stimulate new operators to enter the market. To achieve this, a large number of market attributes have to be regulated and monitored. 22.2.1 Fair Competition When Europe opened for full competition of mobile communication in 1992, one of the first company in each European country to established itself as mobile network operator (MNO) was the operator owning the entire telecommunica- tions infrastructure of that country—the government-owned de facto monopoly (also called the incumbent). The incumbent had thus an enormous initial market power. To reduce the market power of the incumbent as MNO, the authorities required the MNO to commercially separate from the other business areas of the incumbent and that the conditions for interconnecting to the fixed network and for the use of infrastructure components (e.g., to connect base stations and exchanges) owned by the incumbent to be the same for all MNOs, including its own MNO. The MNO must have access to exclusive slots in the radio-frequency spectrum. The amount of spectrum allocated for mobile communications is scarce, and there is room for only a few MNOs in the same region. Fair competition for frequency resources is achieved by dividing the spectrum into slots and then auctioning each slot to existing or new operators. This allowed only a few operators in each country. To increase competition, the market was also opened up for resellers and mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs). Resellers buy bulk traffic capacity from MNOs and resell it under their own brand to the customers. MVNOs own some network infrastructure but buy access to the wireless infrastructure from MNOs. Resellers and MVNOs need no frequency licenses to operate. The regulation authority enforces competition rules and supervises that resellers and MVNOs meet fair competition in the mobile market. See also 7 Chap. 5 for more about resellers and MVNOs. The mobile market is an oligopoly with just a few MNOs in each country. Some of these MNOs may have market power big enough to take actions that alter com- petition or establish new market rules. These are referred to as dominating MNOs. Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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