DOI QR코드

DOI QR Code

Measuring the Effects of the Uniform Settlement Rate Requirement in the International Telephone Industry

  • LEE, SUIL (KDI School of Public Policy and Management)
  • Received : 2019.09.10
  • Published : 2020.02.28

Abstract

As a case study of an ex-post evaluation of regulations, in this paper I evaluate the 'uniform settlement rate requirement', a regulation that was introduced in 1986 and that was applied to the international telephone market in the U.S. for more than 20 years. In a bilateral market between the U.S. and a foreign country, each U.S. firm and its foreign partner jointly provide international telephone service in both directions, compensating each other for terminating incoming calls to their respective countries. The per-minute compensation amount for providing the termination service, referred to as the settlement rate, is determined by a bargaining process involving the two firms. In principle, each U.S. firm could have a different settlement rate for the same foreign country. In 1986, however, the Federal Communications Commission introduced the Uniform Settlement Rate Requirement (USRR), which required all U.S. firms to pay the same settlement rate to a given foreign country. The USRR significantly affected the relative bargaining positions of the U.S. and foreign firms, thereby changing negotiated settlement rates. This paper identifies two main routes through which the settlement rates are changed by the implementation of the USRR: the Competition-Induced-Incentive Effect and the Most-Favored-Nation Effect. I then empirically evaluate the USRR by estimating a bargaining model and conducting counterfactual experiments aimed at measuring the size of the two effects of the USRR. The experiments show remarkably large impacts due to the USRR. Requiring a uniform settlement rate, for instance, results in an average 32.2 percent increase in the negotiated settlement rates and an overall 13.7 percent ($3.43 billion) decrease in the total surplus in the U.S. These results provide very strong evidence against the implementation of the USRR in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Keywords

References

  1. Appelbe, T. W., Snihur, N. A., Dineen, C., Farnes, D., and Giordano, R. 1988. "Point-to-point demand modeling: an application to Canada-Canada and Canada-United States long distance calling," Information Economics and Policy 3: 311-332. https://doi.org/10.1016/0167-6245(88)90030-3
  2. Binmore, K., Rubinstein, A., and Wolinsky, A. 1986. "The Nash bargaining solution in economic modelling," Rand Journal of Economics 17(2): 176-188. https://doi.org/10.2307/2555382
  3. European Commission. 2017a. "Commission Decision concerning Case ES/2017/1965: Market for access and call origination on public mobile telephone networks in Spain." (https://circabc.europa.eu/sd/a/b20c3832-4b10-49dd-8081-2f383828cbbd/ES-, accessed: Aug. 16. 2019).
  4. European Commission. 2017b. Europe's Digital Progress Report 2017 (https://ec.europa.eu/digital-single-market/en/news/europes-digital-progress-report-2017-country-profiles-telecomcountry-reports, accessed: Aug. 16. 2019).
  5. FCC. 1996. "AT&T Declared No Longer Dominant in International Market." News Report No. IN 96-15.
  6. FCC. 1997a. Distribution of Equal Access Lines and Presubscription Lines.
  7. FCC. 1997b. "In the matter of International Settlement Rates." IB Docket No. 96-261, Report and Order, FCC 97-280.
  8. FCC. 1985-1995. International Telecommunications Data various issue.
  9. FCC. 1998. Trends in the US International Telecommunications Industry.
  10. FCC. 1999. "Report and Order and Order on Reconsideration," FCC 99-73.
  11. FCC. 2001. Universal Service Monitoring Report. CC Docket No. 98-202.
  12. FCC. 2002. "Notice of Proposed Rulemaking," FCC 02-285.
  13. Madden, G. and Savage, S. J. 2000. "Market structure, competition, and pricing in United States international telephone service markets," The Review of Economics and Statistics 82(2): 291-296. https://doi.org/10.1162/003465300558803
  14. IMF. 1996-1997. Direction of Trade Yearbook.
  15. ITU. 1995. ITU-T Recommendation D.300 R: Determination of Accounting Rate Shares in Telephone Relations between Countries in Europe and the Mediterranean Basin.
  16. Nevo, A. 2001. "Measuring Market Power in the Ready-to-eat Cereal Industry," Econometrica 69(2): 307-342. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0262.00194
  17. OECD. 1990-1997. Communications Outlook. Various issues.
  18. Rubinstein, A. 1982. "Perfect Equilibrium in a Bargaining Model," Econometrica 50(1): 97-110. https://doi.org/10.2307/1912531
  19. TeleGeography, Inc. 1995. TeleGeography 1995: Global Telecommunications Traffic Statistics and Commentary.
  20. World Bank. 2003. World Development Indicators.