Christopher Swann is a senior consultant
and economist at Global
Insight, Inc. He has worked at Bell
Atlantic (Verizon Communications)
in research, product management,
and regulatory areas. He holds a
B.A. from Washington University
and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from
Temple University. He is a past
president of the Philadelphia
NABE chapter and past chair of the NABE Technology
Roundtable.
David Loomis is co-director of the
Institute for Regulatory Policy
Studies and associate professor of
economics at Illinois State
University. He earned his Ph.D. in
economics at Temple University. He
also worked at Bell Atlantic for 11
years. He has published articles in
the Review of Industrial
Organization and other journals
and has co-edited two telecommunications books with
Lester Taylor.
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 created a framework
for competition in local telecommunications.
Under its rules and under the jurisdiction of state regulatory
authorities, competitive local telephone companies
were to gain access to some or all parts of the
incumbent’s network through known wholesale tariffs
and offer retail local telephone service. As customers
Competition in Local
Telecommunications
adopt other technologies for communications—mobile
wireless service, broadband for email, messaging, and
information retrieval—additional competitive pressures
are put on the core voice telephone market. The substitution
of usage and access from local telephony to other
modes of communication is regarded as intermodal competition
and is the subject of this paper. This study concerns
local telecommunications competition between
incumbent and competitive service providers in the United
States. In addition to measuring competition from within
the wireline market, we find significant intermodal competitive
impacts resulting from wireless and high-speed
development. We report empirical results from an econometric
model that measures line loss impacts between
carriers and the effects of wireless and high-speed services
on the wireline market. The paper offers interpretation
of the strategic and policy implications of these results.