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The author responds to a paper written by Robert W. Crandall and Clifford Winston on the effects of antitrust policy on consumer welfare.
Ferguson's proposals are based onpoor understanding of telecommunications regulation and claims that the broadband marketplaceis exercising monopoly power.
Was the Environmental Protection Agency’s denial of the petition to regulate emissions of greenhouse gases from motor vehicles reasonable?
Telecommunications industry participants are advocating further "structural separation" of the country"s large local telecommunications carriers.
Should the United States pursue a vigorous antitrust policy?
The authors analyze, and reject as unpersuasive, the putative benefits of mandatory structural separation.
Experts examine the economic potential of broadband and evaluate different approaches to its regulation.
The FCC would advance the public interest by ruling that the ILECs are non-dominant in the mass-market broadband services market.



