1 / 18

Market Definition in the Telecoms Industry

Market Definition in the Telecoms Industry. Prof. Jordi Gual IESE Business School Barcelona-Madrid Brussels, 16 September 2002. Outline. The economics of relevant antitrust markets Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues What is different about telecoms? Concluding remarks.

Pat_Xavi
Télécharger la présentation

Market Definition in the Telecoms Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Market Definition in the Telecoms Industry Prof. Jordi Gual IESE Business School Barcelona-Madrid Brussels, 16 September 2002

  2. Outline • The economics of relevant antitrust markets • Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues • What is different about telecoms? • Concluding remarks Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  3. The economics of relevant antitrust markets • The hypothetical monopoly principle • The hypothetical monopoly principle when fixed costs are important Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  4. The hypothetical monopoly principle (I): definition • The set of services whose provision, if in the hands of a single entity, could profitably be restricted • Also known as the small but significant (5 or 10%) non-transitory increase in price test (the SSNIP test) • Why is it reasonable? • Position of individual firms computed relative to an aggregate which gives full control • Gradual addition of substitutes • Relative to the competitive benchmark Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  5. The hypothetical monopoly principle (II): the mark-up • A monopolist would raise price p by: where e is the elasticity of demand and mc marginal cost • Several firms acting jointly will face a residualdemand: how demand falls when firms coordinate price increases, taking into account the reaction of excluded products • The price increase that these firms can achieve depends on the elasticity of the residualdemand Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  6. The hypothetical monopoly principle (III): measurement • The elasticity of residualdemand depends on: • the extent to which the excluded are products good substitutes • and how aggressive their producers are • In the absence of quantitative information: • demand substitutability • supply substitutability Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  7. The hypothetical monopoly principle with fixed costs • With fixed costs may not be sustainable for the industry • If the fixed costs are technically based: compute the average mark-up which covers industry fixed costs • If the fixed costs are strategic (continuing “sunk” investments in R&D and brand) • the static mark-up does not capture dynamic efficiency • substitutability is driven by relative product performance and not price Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  8. Outline • The economics of relevant antitrust markets • Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues • What is different about telecoms? • Concluding remarks Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  9. Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues (I) • Product/Service markets • Fixed/Mobile • Mass/Business • Geographic definition Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  10. Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues (II) • In theory, based on the hypothetical monopoly test • In practice, focus on demand substitutability and similarity of competitive conditions • Need to recognize explicitly supply substitutability Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  11. Outline • The economics of relevant antitrust markets • Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues • What is different about telecoms? • Concluding remarks Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  12. What is different about telecoms? • Wholesale/retail • Networks • Bottlenecks • Bundles • The case of mobile call termination • Product/service innovation Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  13. Bundles of telecom services • Varying degrees of complementarity in demand and scope economies in supply • The hypothetical monopoly principle does not work: • Strong complementarities => low own-price elasticity for individual services => narrow markets • Enlarging the product set may lower market power • When enlarging the product set, prices should not be kept constant • Stand-alone services make sense when: low complementarity and independent supply Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  14. The case of mobile termination: the regulatory approach • Insufficient incentives for price competition • due to CPP • no offsetting factors • observed high margins • Market delineation: call termination in each network due to low demand and supply substitutability • Introduction of regulation Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  15. The case of mobile termination: the antitrust approach • Determine the relevant market • Examine the nature of demand relationships without considering competitive conditions • Examine the alternative sources of supply • Assess the degree of competition in the previously defined markets • Impose regulation in the relevant markets if competition is insufficient Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  16. Product/service innovation • In parts of the industry, fixed costs are sunk and related to strategic competition in service or product innovation • A broader concept of substitutability is needed: • between technologies that can satisfy similar consumer demands • between suppliers that own assets which could lead to the alternative technologies Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  17. Outline • The economics of relevant antitrust markets • Defining markets in telecoms: conventional issues • What is different about telecoms? • Concluding remarks Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

  18. Concluding remarks • Need to pay more attention to supply substitutability • Systems of services as relevant units of market analysis • Need to redefine the competitive benchmark in the presence of fixed costs • Absence of competition in an individual service should not determine market definition Prof. Jordi Gual, IESE Business School

More Related