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September 14, 2012
Natural Monopoly and Distorted Competition: Evidence from Unbundling Fiber-Optic Networks
Posted by D. Daniel Sokol
Naoaki Minamihashi, Bank of Canada explores Natural Monopoly and Distorted Competition: Evidence from Unbundling Fiber-Optic Networks.
ABSTRACT: Can regulation solve problems arising from a natural monopoly? This paper analyzes whether "unbundling," referring to regulations that enforce sharing of natural monopolistic infrastructure, prevents entrants from building new infrastructure. It models and estimates a dynamic entry game to evaluate the effects of regulation, using a dataset for construction of fiber-optic networks in Japan. The counterfactual exercise shows that forced unbundling regulation leads to a 24% decrease in the incidence of new infrastructure builders. This suggests, therefore, that when a new technology is being diffused, regulation to remove a natural monopoly conversely involves risks that incumbent monopolists' shares will increase.
September 14, 2012 | Permalink
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