Lecture 3 Incentive Regulation in Telecom - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lecture 3 Incentive Regulation in Telecom

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PCS. Cable. Electric Companies? Others? 7/27/09 ... PCS ... AT&T won 19; Sprint PCS won 29 covering 3/4 of US; PCS Primeco won 11. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 3 Incentive Regulation in Telecom


1
Lecture 3Incentive Regulation in Telecom
2
Issues with Initial PC plans
  • Interim plan or better long term solution
  • X-Factor Importance

3
ATT Price Cap Plan
  • Three baskets
  • 1. MTS or the "grandma basket"
  • 2. 800 service - ATT retained some control.
  • 3. Other large business "bye-bye basket".
  • Individual price bands /- 5 X 3.0
  • NPRM, FRPM, 1987 -1989. Approved March 16, 1989.
  • LECs position.

4
LEC PC Plan
  • LECs came later - approved September 1990.
  • LEC productivity 3.3 with ROR bands. Current ROR
    was 11.25. IF ROR went gt1, 50/50 sharing until
    5 over (i.e. 16.25). After that, total
    giveback.
  • LECs could choose 4.3 productivity. They would
    then retain all profit below 13.25 and half up
    to 17.25.

5
Revised LEC Price Cap Plan - May 1995
  • 3 options
  • X4.0 sharing between 12.25 and 13.25 ROR.
    Min 10.25 Max 13.25
  • X4.7 sharing between 12.25 and 16.25 ROR. Min
    10.25 Max 16.25
  • X5.3 no sharing, min or max.
  • NYNEX, SNET U S West chose A Ameritech, Bell
    Atlantic, Bell South, Pacific Telesis SBC chose
    C

6
Final PC plan
  • Effective 7/1/97
  • X-factor 6.5 (including CPD)
  • No Sharing No Cap on earnings

7
The need for rate rebalancing
  • Rural versus Urban
  • Businesses are higher margin than residence.
  • IntraLATA toll is high margin for both residence
    and business.
  • Problems of incentive regulation

8
Problem
  • New entrants will target high margin business
    and go after urban areas leaving unrenumerative
    customers and for the incumbent.

9
Problem (contd)
  • If ROR and price caps were effective regulation,
    total revenue from rates to close to total cost
    including a normal return.
  • If the new entrants cream-skim and take the
    highest margin customers, the incumbents will
    suffer real losses and if they raise rates across
    the board to cover losses, more customers will
    have incentives to go to a new entrant

10
Solutions
  • 1. Rate rebalancing before entry. Whose rates
    get raised? Rural and residential. Not very
    politically feasible.
  • 2. Allow incumbent new revenue sources to account
    for losses in local.

11
Long distance and cable as new sources of revenue
  • Is this feasible? If customer want
    one-stop-shopping and IXCs already have account
    executives for most large businesses, IXCs might
    win out.
  • Cable does not look very profitable to a new
    entrant right now. Also what about content?

12
Competitors than IXCs
  • CLECs
  • Cellular
  • PCS
  • Cable
  • Electric Companies?
  • Others?

13
Current Cellular Technology
  • FCC gave away rights to radio spectrum 25MHz to
    each of two carriers creating a duopoly in each
    market. One license went to wireline company the
    other based on merit and hearings, then
    lottery.
  • Systems were analog at first. Recently moved to
    digital. Two competing technologies - TDMA 3x
    capacity. CDMA 10X capacity.

14
Current Cellular (contd)
  • Cellular to date has been a complement rather
    than substitute to wireline. Tradeoff of price
    to mobility.
  • Cost of copper wire local loop is about 1800.
    Cost of cellular system 700 per subscriber.
    Cellular use rates 40-50 cents per minute. (Costs
    continue to decrease.)
  • Marketing is 600 per sub and general
    administrative 140 per sub. LECs spend less
    than 100 on both. Usage costs are higher though.
    And you pay to receive calls.

15
PCS
  • FCC auctioned off 3 30 MHz blocks and 3 10 MHz
    blocks in each of 51 MTAs raising 7.7 billion
  • ATT won 19 Sprint PCS won 29 covering 3/4 of
    US PCS Primeco won 11.
  • Cheaper to provide than existing cellular and
    digital from start

16
Cable
  • Telephony overbuild cost 300-745 per sub.
  • Still technical diff. Going from one-way to
    two-way network.
  • Poor customer service and high marketing cost may
    prevent high take rates

17
VoIP
  • Voice quality has improved
  • Premises equipment is cheap
  • No Taxes or fees
  • No Access Charges?
  • 911 Emergency Service

18
Can/is the local market contestable?
  • Will rate increase above LRIC cause enough
    customers to switch that it makes in unprofitable
    for the LEC to do so?
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