Posts Tagged ‘Optimal level of regulation’

Next Generation Spectrum Policy

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

I am very pleased to announce that the FCC has just published a suite of papers which I worked on while I was there. This work sought to tackle some of the intractable problems facing spectrum policy. For nearly a century, spectrum policy has focused on “scarcity” and resolving “harmful interference”. This was largely due to limits of the technology of the day. Now radios fueled by semi-conductor processing power, are enabling spectrum policy to evolve. We can now focus on a much more efficient principle of “use coordination”. The first paper in the series, OSP Working Paper #41, examines the Tragedy of the Commons and how economic protocols might be employed to alleviate this problem, while preserving the openness and innovation associated with unlicensed operation. It achieves this by coordinating competing demands on the spectrum. There are several different means for assigning priority to allocate use. However, allowing would-be users to express their willingness to pay seems to be the most economically efficient. Through an economic coordination protocol, usage at any given time is awarded to those with the highest value. OSP Working Paper #43, looks at how the set of rights which underlie this regime can be assigned through auctions.

Insight: Of all the work I have done in my professional career, this is the product of which I am most proud. The future of spectrum policy will be one of “use coordination”, where the “exclusiveness” of a license will be determined at an auction along with which entities are assigned the license. We are back to First Principles. This work holds the promise to wrestle the spectrum from the hands of a few powerful entities and put it back in our hands. In addition, it is likely to increase efficiency and hence the benefit we all receive from its use. The beauty of the system is that if the current spectrum arrangement is the most efficient, then it will emerge as such. At the very least, we will have exposed society to a huge upside with very little downside risk. It also would allow us to grant priorities to those whose ability to pay is diminished, such as public safety and financially disadvantaged users.

As a body of work, it has far reaching implications. At the recent FCC field hearing on network management (viz. Net Neutrality), there was much reasonable debate on what constitutes reasonable network management. There were many views as to how to handle competing demands on limited network resources. To my mind, the most efficient way will be some variation on willingness to pay, perhaps through an economic coordination protocol.

Irish International Advisory Forum on Broadband

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

I am very please to announce that I have been appointed to an International Advisory Forum on Next Generation Broadband Networks.  Minister Eamon Ryan of the Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources established this Advisory Forum of senior telecoms experts and CEOs from around the world in order to advise him on the optimum role for Government in the development of Next Generation Broadband in the Republic of Ireland.

Insight:  As side for being a fantastic opportunity for me, I think this is right approach to policy formation, broadband or otherwise.  Policy makers should always pursue the “optimum role for Government.”

Classical conservative political though holds that “government is the problem,” and that a laissez faire approach is best.  Conversely, liberal politics hold that the profit motive is a sufficiently corrupting influence that in the absence of rules constraining the market place, the private sector will steal everything that is not nailed down. I am a lawyer, so I see these two statements as not mutually exclusive and both possible true.  I am also an MBA, so I can also see that there is some tradeoff between the two approaches.  And, if there is a tradeoff, it follows that there must me some optimization: one rule too many and government throws up barriers to entry to the market place; one government employee too few and the Invisible Hand can get into the Invisible Cookie Jar.  Thus, the policymaker should always be managing regulation to this efficiency frontier.