1 / 19

IS250 Spring 2010 chuang@ischool.berkeley

Network Economics “W e know how to route packets, what we don ’t know how to do is route dollars. ” -- David C. Clark. IS250 Spring 2010 chuang@ischool.berkeley.edu. Routing Dollars on the Internet.

Télécharger la présentation

IS250 Spring 2010 chuang@ischool.berkeley

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. Network Economics“We know how to route packets, what we don’t know how to do is route dollars.” -- David C. Clark IS250 Spring 2010 chuang@ischool.berkeley.edu

  2. Routing Dollars on the Internet • O’Donnell, An Economic Map of the Internet, Telecommunications Policy Research Conference, 2002. John Chuang

  3. Agenda • Today: • Economic characteristics of communication networks • Economies of scale • Network effects • Implications to industry structure and public policy • In Three Weeks: • Competition models • Monopoly, perfect competition, oligopoly • Price discrimination, switching cost • Interconnection and industry structure • Horizontal merger • Vertical integration John Chuang

  4. Economics 101 • Consumer • Demand • willingness to pay • ProducerSupply • cost structure Market Structure e.g., monopoly, duopoly, perfect competition Price of Good/Service Welfare (surplus) • Producer Surplus (profit) = revenue minus cost • Consumer Surplus = valuation minus price paid • Total Surplus or Social Welfare = PS + CS John Chuang

  5. Supply & Demand in the Network Context • Supply: cost of providing network service • fixed cost • marginal cost • Demand: how much users value (and are willing to pay for) the service • more difficult to quantify • need empirical measurement John Chuang

  6. Economies of Scale • Communication networks exhibit strong economies of scale: • High fixed cost (e.g., trenching cost, up-front capital investment) • Low/zero marginal cost (of sending additional byte of traffic over network) • EoS: Average cost declines as output level increases John Chuang

  7. Traditional Goods & Services $ • Q* is optimal firm output • If market size (QTOT) >= NQ*,then it is socially optimal for market to be served by N firms AC Q John Chuang Q* QTOT

  8. Infrastructure Goods & Services $ • Strong economies of scale (high FC, low MC): AC curve declines for entire market size • Cost-efficient to have the entire market served by a single firm • “natural monopoly” AC Q John Chuang QTOT

  9. A monopolist is a price-maker A monopolist maximizes profit, at the expense of consumer welfare A monopolist may become inefficient (lazy) in the absence of competition Competition instills market discipline Firms are price-takers in a competitive economy Price competition leads prices to marginal cost Inefficient firms (higher MC) exit market However, firms cannot recover fixed cost with marginal cost pricing… • Caught between a rock and a hard place? What can we do? • Public utility • Regulated monopoly John Chuang

  10. Technological Change $ • Natural monopoly may not last forever • Technological change may result in new cost curve: same market may now be optimally served by multiple firms Q John Chuang QTOT

  11. Example: Major Milestones in Telephony in U.S. • AT&T as Regulated Monopoly AT&T John Chuang

  12. Monolithic Network Local Long Distance Local Tandem Switch Local Loop Central Office (CO) Class 5 Switch Customer Premise Equipment (CPE) John Chuang

  13. Long Distance CompetitionEnabled by Interconnection (circa 1969-1972) • But local market still monopoly. Implications? Local Exchange Carrier (LEC) Inter Exchange Carrier (IXC) Local Exchange Carrier (LEC) Local Loop Central Office (CO) Class 5 Switch Customer Premise Equipment (CPE) MCI John Chuang

  14. Divestiture of AT&T1984 • Dept. of Justice sued AT&T for anti-trust violation • Consent decree called for structural separation between local and long distance service • AT&T split up into Long Distance and seven regional bell operating companies (RBOCs, aka baby bells) • Pacific Bell, US West, Southwestern Bell, Bell South, Ameritech, Nynex, Bell Atlantic • Local markets still regulated monopolies AT&T RBOC RBOC MCI John Chuang

  15. Local Access Competition1996 Telecommunications Act • Facilities-based Competition • Open access: Unbundled Network Elements AT&T RBOC RBOC MCI Cable MSO John Chuang Wireless Operator

  16. Network Effects • Also known as “network externalities” or “demand-side economies of scale” • Externality: value (including costs and benefits) of a good/service not fully reflected in its price • e.g., the sticker price of an automobile does not include the economic impact of its potential to pollute • Network externality: value of the network is a function of the network size John Chuang

  17. Network Effects • Value of network increases with network size • e.g., telephones, fax machines, email clients • Sarnoff: value of a network is proportional to its size (v  N) • Metcalfe’s Law: value of a network is proportional to the square of the number of users (v  N^2) • Reed: value of network grows with the number of possible sub-groups that can be formed (v  2^N) • Negative network effects possible due to congestion, telemarketers, etc. • Odlyzko and Tilly: v  N(logN) John Chuang

  18. Implications • “Winner-take-all” or “tipping” dynamics • Adoption of new technologies • Subject to excess inertia • Influenced by availability and efficiency of converters John Chuang Source: Joseph, Shetty, Chuang, Stoica, Modeling the Adoption of New Network Architectures, 2007

  19. Summary • Communication networks exhibit • High fixed cost, low marginal cost (strong economies of scale) • Positive/negative network effects (demand-side economies/diseconomies of scale) • Implications: • Natural monopoly; justifications for regulation or deregulation • Competition subject to tipping effects; technology transitions subject to excess inertia John Chuang

More Related