The present study offers an in-depth economic and legal enquiry of the
relationship between regulation and competition law in the electronic
communications sector.
It first investigates market failures and failures created by anticompetitive
behavior, in light of the economic, legal, structural and historical peculiarities of
the telecommunication domain. In this regards, the role of the essentiality of the
infrastructure and the presence of facility-based and service-based competition
mechanisms will be comprehensively addressed.
The study further explores internal interferences between regulation and
competition, scrutinizing the partly different aims pursued. The resulting scenario
is extremely fragmented, including tendencies towards alignment, contraposition
and juxtaposition. Indeed, from an analysis of the various obligations imposed on
the incumbent operator by the regulator, a mosaic of diverse solutions are
embraced, for instance in regards to cost-orientation requirements, prices tests,
termination services, nondiscrimination and interconnection obligations.
This complex architecture also affects the external linkages between
regulation and competition, especially in terms of application of competition law
to highly regulated sectors and the effects of reciprocal influences on their goals.
In this respect, concerns associated with legal certainty, coherence in the
enforcement of the law and in the application of sanctions come into play.
This study additionally contributes to the current debate on technology
innovation in network systems, addressing the concerns related to the
preeminence of an incumbent in a regulated sectors. The issues stemming impose
further analysis and policy recommendations tackling the need to overcome the
present coordination breakdown between the incumbent and other operators,
defined as the tragedy of the anticommons.
Finally, the present study leads to a detailed critique of the hackneyed
notion of competition law and regulation complementarity, arguing for a much
more sounded “principle of regulatory consistency”, capable of tempering
antitrust enforcement and warranting not purely pro-competitive objectives, but
also fostering a pro-industrial policy. The author lastly warns against the inherent
risks of the economic approach to competition law, whose obligations and
remedies are applied following a “case by case” evaluation, often hampering the
coherence of interventions and causing difficulties for market operators.The present study offers an in-depth economic and legal enquiry of the
relationship between regulation and competition law in the electronic
communications sector.
It first investigates market failures and failures created by anticompetitive
behavior, in light of the economic, legal, structural and historical peculiarities of
the telecommunication domain. In this regards, the role of the essentiality of the
infrastructure and the presence of facility-based and service-based competition
mechanisms will be comprehensively addressed.
The study further explores internal interferences between regulation and
competition, scrutinizing the partly different aims pursued. The resulting scenario
is extremely fragmented, including tendencies towards alignment, contraposition
and juxtaposition. Indeed, from an analysis of the various obligations imposed on
the incumbent operator by the regulator, a mosaic of diverse solutions are
embraced, for instance in regards to cost-orientation requirements, prices tests,
termination services, nondiscrimination and interconnection obligations.
This complex architecture also affects the external linkages between
regulation and competition, especially in terms of application of competition law
to highly regulated sectors and the effects of reciprocal influences on their goals.
In this respect, concerns associated with legal certainty, coherence in the
enforcement of the law and in the application of sanctions come into play.
This study additionally contributes to the current debate on technology
innovation in network systems, addressing the concerns related to the
preeminence of an incumbent in a regulated sectors. The issues stemming impose
further analysis and policy recommendations tackling the need to overcome the
present coordination breakdown between the incumbent and other operators,
defined as the tragedy of the anticommons.
Finally, the present study leads to a detailed critique of the hackneyed
notion of competition law and regulation complementarity, arguing for a much
more sounded “principle of regulatory consistency”, capable of tempering
antitrust enforcement and warranting not purely pro-competitive objectives, but
also fostering a pro-industrial policy. The author lastly warns against the inherent
risks of the economic approach to competition law, whose obligations and
remedies are applied following a “case by case” evaluation, often hampering the
coherence of interventions and causing difficulties for market operators.LUISS PhD Thesi
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