European Proposals Show Continued Leadership Even if They Aren’t the Best Ideas

Paul Kouroupas's picture

The release of the proposals by the European Commission for reform of the European regulatory framework for telecom firms is surely just the beginning of what is to be a major political battle within Europe. The proposals garnering the greatest attention at the moment are the ones aimed at the forming a European-wide regulatory authority and allowing national regulators to “functionally separate” the incumbent carriers if other measures fail to introduce competition.

On the subject of the European-wide regulatory authority, I must say I think it is a bad idea and I think the U.S. experience should serve as a vivid example of the problems with such an approach. There was a time, back in the late 1980s and early 1990s when individual states in the United States began experimenting with liberalization of the telecommunications market. New York and Illinois were the early pioneers in this effort. Other states, including Maryland, Massachusetts, Florida, Michigan, California, Washington, and Connecticut, recognized that market liberalization was good for investment and local business and moved quickly to initiate rulemakings or modify their telecommunications laws to open the local telephony market to competition. By the time the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was passed by Congress, more than a dozen states had ended the local telephone monopoly and implemented measures to promote local exchange competition. At least a dozen more states (including Tennessee, Georgia, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Texas, and Colorado) were in the process of initiating changes to their laws and regulations as well so that basically half of the states were in the process of liberalization.

But once the Telecommunications Act of 1996 passed and the experiment in local competition was nationalized, what started as an orderly progression towards effective market liberalization quickly disintegrated into an orgy of regulatory gamesmanship and litigation. That the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was a mistake was made clear when the FCC issued its first “local competition order” – a nearly 800 page order that attempted establish comprehensive local competition rules, most of which were eventually overturned after years of litigation.

How the FCC could get it so wrong when nearly half the states were getting it right is a lesson on the dangers of centralization that the Europeans would do well to heed. But putting aside the substantive policy problems that a central authority would have, the situation in Europe is a bad idea for the simple reason that it is going to have the effect of freezing progress, not accelerating progress towards liberalization, as parties litigate the contours of the authority of this new pan-European regulator. National regulatory authorities hostile to the idea of a pan-European regulator will simply shut down, forcing interested parties to pursue their cause at the pan-European regulatory authority, ultimately triggering litigation by the losing party. This process could take years to sort out during which time critical issues will remain unresolved. Moreover, this process involves substantial legal and political cost and resources for the parties involved, which lends a decisive advantage to incumbent operators. Most nascent competitors lack the legal and political resources necessary to effectively pursue a legal claim over the course of several years from the national regulator, up to the pan-European authority, and eventually back to the national regulator where the matter will be resolved on some form of remand. So not only will progress be frozen pending the outcome of litigation, but the outcome is more likely to be favorable to incumbent interests since they are the only parties with the resources to see the process through to its conclusion.

My feelings about the proposal to allow national regulatory authorities to impose functional separation on incumbent operators are much more favorable from a substantive perspective, but I still have questions about the procedure. The proposal says national regulatory authorities can impose functional separation as a measure of “last resort” and only after receiving approval from the European Commission. I am not sure European Commission approval is a necessary component to this and it would probably be better if the European Commission simply clarifies the authority of national regulators in this regard.

For the moment, these are just proposals for reform. It remains to be seen whether the European Commission will adopt them, but it demonstrates once again that the Europeans are setting the example for the world on how to effectively liberalize telecommunications markets. Here in the U.S., policy makers seem unable to tackle the primary obstacles to more effective competition and are devoid of any creative ideas as to how to overcome them.

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Paul Kouroupas – Fri, 2007 – 11 – 16 13:01
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Ironically, in the build-up t

Ironically, in the build-up to the publication of these proposals Reding often cited the US market as an example of where there is effective infrastructure-based competition. Strange that she never really bothered (or chose not to) look beyond that to see an effective duopoly...

I am not sure I agree that national regulators would just close down if they are hostile to the idea of the Market Authority. For a start, under these proposals Member States are legally obliged to have an independent national regulator so if there was a non-functioning national regulator, the Member State concerned would probably be taken to the ECJ for failure to comply with EC law. I do agree the Commission has not justified the existence of the Market Authority itself.

Anyway, I don't think it remains to be seen whether the Commission will adopt these proposals. The Commission are extremely keen on them as they mainly involve giving the Commission a great deal more power (rightly or wrongly...). What remains to be seen is the reception of these proposals within the relevant Committees in the European Parliament, particularly Industry Cttee, Economic Affairs Cttee and the Internal Market Cttee. Secondly, the effectiveness of both incumbent and altnet lobbying their national representatives will go some way to determining the view of the Council of Ministers on the proposals - along with the mass of lobbying they'll have received from other interest groups, industry associations and consumer representatives.

I would be interested to hear your views on the Commission itself gaining greater veto power over national regulatory authorities' regulatory remedies and the power to impose remedies. Also, as a global operator, what issues you face in offering pan-European telecoms services in Europe and whether you this review might go any way to rectifying that?

Anonymous (not verified) – Mon, 2007 – 11 – 26 11:46

Granting the EC veto power ov

Granting the EC veto power over NRA actions is a positive development because it creates a process whereby unjust NRA actions could be quickly overturned.  It also allows the EC to achieve their goal of a unified market by overturning deviant NRA rulings. 

As for pan-European operations, Europe is a more hospitable market than the U.S.  Europe has eliminated licensing requirements, they don't have tariff requirements, they don't have artificially high "access charges" and they have unified rates for call termination, they have an aggressive champion for competition and are experimenting with functional separation.  All of these developments create a market more accomodating of competition.  Of course there are still country-specific rules and practices which must be adhered to, but I do not think it is necessary or desirable to expect all of Europe to be uniform.  Each local market is different so it makes sense to have different regulations - within a reasonable range - and I think the veto power gives the EC the tools it needs to establish the reasonable range.

Paul (not verified) – Tue, 2007 – 11 – 27 14:05

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