Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2005
Abstract
The United States is losing its competitive edge in telecommunications partly because of FCC mistakes in fragmenting property rights in, and in the regulatory oversight of local telephone facilities and services. As with postsocialist transition, reformers created a "tragedy of the anticommons" in which too many owners and regulators each can block the others' investments and all players forego innovation. By forcing existing companies to unbundle network elements (UNEs) and sell them too cheaply, the FCC has created an industry where the players cannibalize the legacy network, divert resources to regulatory arbitrage, and have little incentive for bold new investments.
Disciplines
Communications Law | Intellectual Property Law | Law
Recommended Citation
Michael A. Heller,
The UNE Anticommons: Why the 1996 Telecom Reforms Blocked Innovation and Investment,
25
Yale J. on Reg.
275
(2005).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/3155