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Increased regulation of wireless telephone service is being proposed by both federal and state policy makers, raising the question of optimal jurisdiction.
House Republicans have broken the hugely successful spectrum auction authorization first effected in 1993 and also delayed for many years any possibility that digital broadcast spectrum that is almost entirely unused can be repurposed to serve the growing demands for wireless broadband.
Conventional wisdom states that the economic well-being of all but the wealthiest Americans has stagnated or declined over the past twenty-five years. In Prices, Poverty, and Inequality: Why Americans Are Better Off Than You Think, Christian Broda and David E. Weinstein argue that this idea is based on misleading measurements...
The next generation of mobile telephone technology could hasten the end of a key aspect of telecommunications regulation.
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A heated debate over the proposed regulation of rates for calls from landlines to wireless networks is taking place in Australia, Europe, Asia, and North America. In the United States, the cellular user pays regardless of whether he is initiating or...
Adjusting poverty measures to account for the benefits of product improvements reveals that Americans in every income group are better off than they were twenty-five years ago.
Prices, Poverty, and Inequality offers an accurate--and encouraging--picture of economic well-being in the United States.




