International complementarities in the Internet : should local access prices be regulated?
Working paper
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Date
2002-05Metadata
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- Discussion papers (SAM) [660]
Abstract
The Internet can be seen as the convergence of different industries,
such as telecommunication, software and media, into an international oligopoly offering
complementary products. In most of these industries we have dominant firms,
but domestic telecommunication firms providing local access are the only ones facing
a restrictive regulatory regime. The other dominant firms are typically US owned.
We show that strict regulation of the domestic telecommunication firm may have
negative welfare effects for other countries than the USA, particularly if we observe fierce competition in the end-user market.
Publisher
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Department of EconomicsSeries
Discussion paper2002:9