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- From: chollifi@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (C Ann Hollifield)
- Subject: cast calendar-research
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.154336.7614@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
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- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 15:43:36 GMT
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-
-
- NRRI relases new study: Deregulation may harm market's efficiency
-
- "Regulation and Efficiency: A Reappraisal of Research and Policies"
- William G. Sheperd
-
- The main question in this study is whether traditional regulation has deeply
- harmed efficiency. If the harms have been great, and deregulation could easily
- create competition and efficient results, then the general case for removing
- regulation is strong.
-
- Economists have indeed shown that there were inefficiencies in various
- transport industries under regulation, and the resulting deregulation has
- generally promoted efficiency. But after 1975 these points were expanded into a
- denunciation of all regulation, supposedly because it always harms efficiency
- deeply. What was true of transportation regulation was said to hold for all
- sectors, including electric and telephone service.
-
- Such assertions are ripe for a skeptical review, following the deregulation
- events of the 1980s. This study re-examines the concepts of the issue and then
- reappraises the most frequently cited empirical studies. It finds that the
- efficiency losses (outside transportation) have not been shown to be
- substantial after all.
-
- The study next turns to the alternatives to traditional regulation. One
- alternative method is to rely upon competition, after removing regulation. But
- when is competition really effective? The study considers the conditions that
- do provide effective competition, using ideas from the complex field known as
- antitrust economics. It turns out that the conditions of effective competition
- are strict, and that they are hard to reach when you start from a regulated
- monopoly. Therefore the deregulation of a regulated monopoly will often fail to
- achieve effective competition, and the desired benefits will often not occur.
-
- Finally, this study considers ideas of "incentive regulation," particularly
- "price caps." Such incentive-sensitive methods might treat dominant firms more
- effectively than does traditional regulation. If so, they might justify partial
- deregulation. But this study notes that they have important limitations. When
- it is applied to complex real situations, "incentive regulation" is often about
- as complicated as is conventional regulation, and the resulting efficiency
- gains may often be small or nil.
-
- The upshot is that regulation should be removed only when the industryUs
- technology has already shifted fully to a state of natural competition, with
- room for many strong competitors. Then the dominance by the original monopolist
- can be quickly swept away, to be replaced by competition among at least five or
- six strong comparable competitors. There also needs to be a lack of entry
- barriers. If all these conditions are met, then competition can be fully
- effective.
-
- But if the natural-monopoly conditions haven't faded entirely away and entry is
- not reasonably free, then deregulation is highly risky; it may merely permit a
- continuation of market dominance by the original monopolist. And now there will
- be no regulatory protections. That situation of unregulated dominance is likely
- to harm efficiency and innovation as much as regulated monopoly does.
-
- To receive a copy of the report, contact NRRI at (614) 292-9404.
-
- * * * * *
-
- New Research: Reports spotlight government procurement, fiber superhighways
-
- In June 1992, the Strategic Computer and Telecommunications in the Public
- Sector Program of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
- University issued a report "Information Technology and Government Procurement,
- Strategic Issues for the Information Age." The report is by Steven Kelman,
- Jerry Mechling and John Springett.
-
-
- The report concludes that the government's procurement policies are a barrier
- to the effective use of information technologies. Awards are rarely based on
- past vendor performance, and policies prevent information technology analysts
- from effectively using the information about system performance gained from
- previous installations. The result is a drag on learning, innovation and
- excellence in the use of information technologies within the government.
-
-
- Likewise, the report suggests that information technologies are being
- inefficiently used in the procurement of other commodities for the government,
- with applications lagging far behind what is possible. The authors suggest that
- information technologies can be more effectively used in procurement if
- government agencies: 1) distinguish between commodities and non-commodities,
- thus facilitating the best applications of information technologies within the
- procurement process; 2) prepare for electronic markets by developing
- infrastructures and experience in selected electronic markets, by developing
- electronic procurement aids, and by experimenting with post-audit controls; 3)
- support discretion and organizational learning within procurement divisions by,
- among other things, expanding procurement discretion, developing guidelines to
- support evolutionary systems, increasing the weight given past vendor
- performance, and developing the staff, skills and support mechanisms for
- complex and innovation-oriented information technology procurements; 4) target
- reforms on electronic commerce and innovation, more than on procurement per se.
-
- For information on obtaining a copy of the report, call the Strategic Program
- at (617) 495-3036.
-
-
- Fiber superhighway
- A new report is available from the Progressive Institute: "Shortcut to the
- Information Superhighway: A Progressive Plan to Speed the Telecommunications
- Revolution," by Steven R. Rivkin and Jeremy D. Rosner. The paper proposes
- involving a new player in creating a national fiber system: the electric
- utilities. The electric utilities, they argue, would be interested in using
- such a network to implement time of day-based usage charges, and the utilities
- might wish to enter into joint ventures with local telephone companies and
- others. Copies of the report can be obtained from The Progressive Policy
- Institute, 316 Pennsylvania Ave. S.E., Suite 555, Washington, D.C., 20003,
- Phone: (202) 547-0001, and Fax: (202) 547-0099.
-
-
-
-
- Recent papers from the University of Nebraska
-
- The following are the most recent additions to the Research Paper Series
- published by the International Center for Telecommunications Management at the
- University of Nebraska at Omaha. The price is $4 per paper. ICTM invites
- submission of research papers to be included in the series. Send orders or
- paper to Ms. Tallie Bishop, ICTM, University of Nebraska at Omaha, 304 CBA,
- Omaha, NE 68182-0459.
-
-
- #17: "Intellectual Property Law Protection as it Applies to Computer Software,"
- by Alan F. Morre and Michael J. O'Hara. June 1992.
-
-
- #16: "The Single Market for European Public Mobile Communication," by Zixiang
- Tan. June 1992.
-
-
- #15: "Application of Activity-Based Costing in a Service Organization," by
- Richard Ortman, Thomas A. Buelt, and Lawrence Jefferies.
-
-
- #14: "The Case for Rural Telecommunications Networks and Policy Implications,"
- by Sufi M. Nazem and YaShin Liu. April 1992.
-
- #13: "The Effects of Telecommunications Deregulation in Nebraska on Investment
- Behavior," by Din Liu. April 1992.
-
- #12: "Telecommunications Technology and Rural Hospitals: A Partnership Destined
- for Success?" by Keith K. Turner and Frances Mallory, April 1992.
-
- #11: "Exploring the Availability and Use of Advanced Information Technologies,"
- by Francis J. Van Wetering. March 1992.
-
- #10: "The Determinants of Traffic and Duration in International Telephone
- Communications," by Sam Ramsey Hakim. March 1992.
-
- * * * *
-
- Book assesses mass media's role in the 1990s
-
- The October/November 1992 issue of Communication Booknotes features reviews by
- editor Christopher Sterling of books on journalism, general communication,
- communication research, the electronic media, European communication,
- communication history and telecommunications. Reprinted below is the review of
- Sterling's choice for this issue's "Book of the Month."
- MEDIA PERFORMANCE: MASS COMMUNICATION AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST
- by Denis McQuail (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1992--$65/$24., ISBN
- 0-8039-8294-1 hard; 0-8039-8295-X paper. 350 pp).
-
-
- This is a new far-reaching text by the University of Amsterdam-based scholar
- that stands back, takes in developments in many countries, and suggests new
- frameworks for assessing media in the 1990s. This is important reading from a
- long-time critical observer of the media scene. As the author puts it: "The
- present book constitutes a link between several long-standing interests of my
- own; theory about communications and society; empirical research into media
- content and media audiences; development of media policy...A central aim of the
- book is to address the problem of the gap between normative social theory of
- the media and applied research."
-
-
- The 23 chapters appear in eight major sections:
- mass communications and society--public communication and the public interest
- as contested territory, traditions of inquiry into media performance, and the
- public interest in communication;
- * media performance norms--the newspaper press, broadcasting, and a framework
- of principle for media assessment;
- * research models and methods--media organizational performance models and
- research options;
- * media freedom--concepts and models from structure to performance, as well as
- the organizational environment;
- * diversity--varieties and processes of diversity, taking the measure of
- diversity in media reflection, media access and audience choice;
- * objectivity--concepts of objectivity, a framework for objectivity research,
- measuring objectivity (news as information, the evaluative dimension of news);
- * media order and social control--media maintenance of public order, policing
- the symbolic environment, solidarity and social identity;
- * media in culture--questions of culture and mass communication, cultural
- identity and autonomy.
-
- The book concludes with a discussion of changing media and changing mores and
- their implications for media assessment. There are about 30 pages of references
- and an index.
-
-
- This is important reading because of the breadth and depth of the arguments and
- discussion, because the author's own record and long-term thinking on these
- things (this project has been under way for some 15 or more years), and because
- of its timing, as we all search for new and better ways of assessing media in
- changing society. McQuail takes into account technology, changing economic and
- political ideologies in a variety of countries and changing conceptions of
- print and electronic media. Highly recommended.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- Did You Read 655 Books on
- Comunication Last Year?
-
- We Did!!!
-
- Last year, Communication Booknotes
- reviewed 655 new books on the topics of:
- Telecommunication technologies
- International communication
- Electronic media content
- History of electronic media
- Communication processes and effects
- Communication industries
- Journalism
- German media books
- Telecommunications policy
- Telecommunications management
- Commonwealth communications
- Criticism and media content
- New publisher's series
- Mass media
- Popular culture
- U.S. government documents
- Communication policy
- Scholarly communication
- Production guides
- Presidential communication
- Canadian communication
- Broadcasting
- History of computers and computing
- History of communication
- General communication
- Comics and comic art
- Communication research
- Australian media
- British communications
- Motion pictures
- Communication Booknotes provides early information and reviews of new
- publications in the field of communications. The Ohio State University's Center
- for Advanced Study in Telecommunications (CAST) is the publisher of
- Communication Booknotes. Christopher Sterling, founder of the publication, is
- editor, joined in recent years by a number of regional and topical contributors
- from around the world. Subscriptions and sample copies are available from CAST
- by sending your request to the address below:
- COMMUNICATION BOOKNOTES
- CAST
- 210 Baker Systems
- 1971 Neil Ave.
- Columbus, OH 43210-1971
-