Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America

The authors review the stylized facts on regulatory reform in telecommunications and its effects on telecommunications development and Internet penetration in Latin America. Relying on data from the International Telecommunication Union, the Information for Development Program (InfoDev), and the World Bank for 1990-99, the authors then test econometrically the determinants of the differences in Internet penetration rates across Latin America. The results show that effective implementation of the reform agenda in telecommunications regulation could accelerate adoption of the Internet in Latin America-even though it is only part of the solution (income levels, income distribution, and access to primary infrastructure are the main determinants of growth in Internet connections and use). Regulation will work by cutting costs. Cost cutting will require that regulators in the region take a much closer look at the design of interconnection rules and at the tradeoffs that emerge from the complex issues involved. It will also require a commitment to developing analytical instruments, such as cost models, to sort out many of the problems. Appropriate cost models will generate benchmarks that are much more consistent with the local issues and with the local cost of capital than international benchmarks will ever be for countries in unstable macroeconomic situations. Cost cutting will require an equally strong commitment to imposing regulatory accounting systems that reduce the information asymmetrics that incumbents use to reduce the risks of entry. All these changes will ultimately require a stronger commitment by competition agencies, since in many countries a failure to negotiate interconnection agreements will raise competition issues just as often as it will raise regulatory questions.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Estache, Antonio, Manacorda, Marco, Valletti, Tommaso M.
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2002-03
Subjects:ADVERTISING, BASIC, BUSINESS TO BUSINESS, COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY, DIGITAL DIVIDE, DISCRIMINATION, FIXED NETWORKS, GATEWAYS, INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS, INTERNET ACCESS, INTERNET HOSTS, INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS, INTERNET USE, INTERVENTION, ISP, LAWS, LINES, LOCAL CALLS, MODEMS, NETWORKS, NEW TECHNOLOGIES, PERSONAL COMPUTERS, SERVICE QUALITY, SUBSCRIBERS, SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES, TAXATION, TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION, TELECOM SERVICES, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION, TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES, TELECOMS, TELEPHONE LINES, TELEPHONY, UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, INTERNET, INTERCONNECTION, TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/03/1733736/telecommunication-reforms-access-regulation-internet-adoption-latin-america
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14320
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spelling dig-okr-10986143202024-08-08T17:56:01Z Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America Estache, Antonio Manacorda, Marco Valletti, Tommaso M. ADVERTISING BASIC BUSINESS TO BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY DIGITAL DIVIDE DISCRIMINATION FIXED NETWORKS GATEWAYS INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS INTERNET ACCESS INTERNET HOSTS INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS INTERNET USE INTERVENTION ISP LAWS LINES LOCAL CALLS MODEMS NETWORKS NEW TECHNOLOGIES PERSONAL COMPUTERS SERVICE QUALITY SUBSCRIBERS SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES TAXATION TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION TELECOM SERVICES TELECOMMUNICATIONS TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES TELECOMS TELEPHONE LINES TELEPHONY UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS INTERNET INTERCONNECTION TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY The authors review the stylized facts on regulatory reform in telecommunications and its effects on telecommunications development and Internet penetration in Latin America. Relying on data from the International Telecommunication Union, the Information for Development Program (InfoDev), and the World Bank for 1990-99, the authors then test econometrically the determinants of the differences in Internet penetration rates across Latin America. The results show that effective implementation of the reform agenda in telecommunications regulation could accelerate adoption of the Internet in Latin America-even though it is only part of the solution (income levels, income distribution, and access to primary infrastructure are the main determinants of growth in Internet connections and use). Regulation will work by cutting costs. Cost cutting will require that regulators in the region take a much closer look at the design of interconnection rules and at the tradeoffs that emerge from the complex issues involved. It will also require a commitment to developing analytical instruments, such as cost models, to sort out many of the problems. Appropriate cost models will generate benchmarks that are much more consistent with the local issues and with the local cost of capital than international benchmarks will ever be for countries in unstable macroeconomic situations. Cost cutting will require an equally strong commitment to imposing regulatory accounting systems that reduce the information asymmetrics that incumbents use to reduce the risks of entry. All these changes will ultimately require a stronger commitment by competition agencies, since in many countries a failure to negotiate interconnection agreements will raise competition issues just as often as it will raise regulatory questions. 2013-07-01T19:33:28Z 2013-07-01T19:33:28Z 2002-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/03/1733736/telecommunication-reforms-access-regulation-internet-adoption-latin-america https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14320 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No.2802 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, D.C.
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ADVERTISING
BASIC
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
DIGITAL DIVIDE
DISCRIMINATION
FIXED NETWORKS
GATEWAYS
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET HOSTS
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INTERNET USE
INTERVENTION
ISP
LAWS
LINES
LOCAL CALLS
MODEMS
NETWORKS
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
PERSONAL COMPUTERS
SERVICE QUALITY
SUBSCRIBERS
SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES
TAXATION
TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION
TELECOM SERVICES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TELECOMS
TELEPHONE LINES
TELEPHONY
UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
INTERNET
INTERCONNECTION
TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY
ADVERTISING
BASIC
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
DIGITAL DIVIDE
DISCRIMINATION
FIXED NETWORKS
GATEWAYS
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET HOSTS
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INTERNET USE
INTERVENTION
ISP
LAWS
LINES
LOCAL CALLS
MODEMS
NETWORKS
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
PERSONAL COMPUTERS
SERVICE QUALITY
SUBSCRIBERS
SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES
TAXATION
TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION
TELECOM SERVICES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TELECOMS
TELEPHONE LINES
TELEPHONY
UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
INTERNET
INTERCONNECTION
TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY
spellingShingle ADVERTISING
BASIC
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
DIGITAL DIVIDE
DISCRIMINATION
FIXED NETWORKS
GATEWAYS
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET HOSTS
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INTERNET USE
INTERVENTION
ISP
LAWS
LINES
LOCAL CALLS
MODEMS
NETWORKS
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
PERSONAL COMPUTERS
SERVICE QUALITY
SUBSCRIBERS
SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES
TAXATION
TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION
TELECOM SERVICES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TELECOMS
TELEPHONE LINES
TELEPHONY
UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
INTERNET
INTERCONNECTION
TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY
ADVERTISING
BASIC
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
DIGITAL DIVIDE
DISCRIMINATION
FIXED NETWORKS
GATEWAYS
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET HOSTS
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INTERNET USE
INTERVENTION
ISP
LAWS
LINES
LOCAL CALLS
MODEMS
NETWORKS
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
PERSONAL COMPUTERS
SERVICE QUALITY
SUBSCRIBERS
SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES
TAXATION
TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION
TELECOM SERVICES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TELECOMS
TELEPHONE LINES
TELEPHONY
UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
INTERNET
INTERCONNECTION
TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY
Estache, Antonio
Manacorda, Marco
Valletti, Tommaso M.
Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America
description The authors review the stylized facts on regulatory reform in telecommunications and its effects on telecommunications development and Internet penetration in Latin America. Relying on data from the International Telecommunication Union, the Information for Development Program (InfoDev), and the World Bank for 1990-99, the authors then test econometrically the determinants of the differences in Internet penetration rates across Latin America. The results show that effective implementation of the reform agenda in telecommunications regulation could accelerate adoption of the Internet in Latin America-even though it is only part of the solution (income levels, income distribution, and access to primary infrastructure are the main determinants of growth in Internet connections and use). Regulation will work by cutting costs. Cost cutting will require that regulators in the region take a much closer look at the design of interconnection rules and at the tradeoffs that emerge from the complex issues involved. It will also require a commitment to developing analytical instruments, such as cost models, to sort out many of the problems. Appropriate cost models will generate benchmarks that are much more consistent with the local issues and with the local cost of capital than international benchmarks will ever be for countries in unstable macroeconomic situations. Cost cutting will require an equally strong commitment to imposing regulatory accounting systems that reduce the information asymmetrics that incumbents use to reduce the risks of entry. All these changes will ultimately require a stronger commitment by competition agencies, since in many countries a failure to negotiate interconnection agreements will raise competition issues just as often as it will raise regulatory questions.
topic_facet ADVERTISING
BASIC
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
DIGITAL DIVIDE
DISCRIMINATION
FIXED NETWORKS
GATEWAYS
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENTS
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET HOSTS
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INTERNET USE
INTERVENTION
ISP
LAWS
LINES
LOCAL CALLS
MODEMS
NETWORKS
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
PERSONAL COMPUTERS
SERVICE QUALITY
SUBSCRIBERS
SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES
TAXATION
TECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATION
TELECOM SERVICES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS REGULATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TELECOMS
TELEPHONE LINES
TELEPHONY
UNIVERSAL SERVICE TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
INTERNET
INTERCONNECTION
TELECOMMUNICATION POLICY
author Estache, Antonio
Manacorda, Marco
Valletti, Tommaso M.
author_facet Estache, Antonio
Manacorda, Marco
Valletti, Tommaso M.
author_sort Estache, Antonio
title Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America
title_short Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America
title_full Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America
title_fullStr Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Telecommunication Reforms, Access Regulation, and Internet Adoption in Latin America
title_sort telecommunication reforms, access regulation, and internet adoption in latin america
publisher World Bank, Washington, D.C.
publishDate 2002-03
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/03/1733736/telecommunication-reforms-access-regulation-internet-adoption-latin-america
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14320
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AT manacordamarco telecommunicationreformsaccessregulationandinternetadoptioninlatinamerica
AT vallettitommasom telecommunicationreformsaccessregulationandinternetadoptioninlatinamerica
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