The policy behind telecommunications is directed by decision makers in the
Municipal[?], State, federal and International arenas; as well as the
Legislative,
Executive,
Judicial branches of government and the Regulatory Commissions like the
FCC.
The governing principles behind telecom policy are:
Institutional Framework in U.S.:
- Independent Regulatory Commissions
- FCC, state PUCs (Public Utility Commisions)
- Delegation Doctrine: statutory authority
- quasi-legislative, executive and judicial functions
- Legislative role (delegation, oversight, budget)
- Executive role (appointment, budget )
- Judicial role (review commission decisions)
The policy framework determines the bundle of service available to the consumer, as well as the industry structure. The hallmark event in the history of the US Telecommunication industry would be the break up of the Bell Telephone company into Baby bells or RBOCs.
The challenge remains preserving competition, while restricting monpolies.
Some of the current challenges:
- Regulation of IP Transport
- Is UNE[?] competition viable?
- Is there really room for multiple Fiber To The Home (FTTH[?]) networks?
- Interconnection and "Open Access"
- Content/Conduit bundling
- Spectrum Policy[?]
Related topics:
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License