Imperial College London

ProfessorTommasoValletti

Business School

Professor of Economics
 
 
 
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Contact

 

+44 (0)20 7594 9215t.valletti Website CV

 
 
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Location

 

417City and Guilds BuildingSouth Kensington Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Citation

BibTex format

@unpublished{Valletti:1999,
author = {Valletti, TM and Estache, A},
title = {The theory of access pricing : an overview for infrastructure regulators},
year = {1999}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - UNPB
AB - An important component of policies to promote effective competition among all segments of network industries (such as electricity, telecommunications, or railways) is a regulatory environment guaranteeing that competitors have access to the services of potential"bottleneck"facilities too costly to duplicate. Rules covering fair access to these facilities - including fair access prices - generally improve economic efficiency by easing competition in markets both upstream and downstream from the bottleneck. Appropriate access pricing rules are especially needed when a dominant firm controls the supply of one or more inputs -- for example, gas transportation, electricity transmission, local telecommunication access, or railway track -- vital for its competitors. Access pricing is part of the antitrust concern central to the so-called essential facilities doctrine covered by U.S. legislation. It is also related broadly to such competition policy issues as quantity discounts, cross-subsidies, tie-ins, refusals to deal or unbundle, exclusive dealing, and predatory pricing. Access pricing is one of the most important and controversial questions in regulating infrastructure services. This complexity stems partly from the practical fact that access rules can be discussed only with reference to the rest of the regulatory environment, since regulators have many goals and constraints. In their survey of access pricing, the authors try to make it clear that access rules should not be assigned too many expectations. There are a few things access prices already do, however, and should continue doing until an all-encompassing solution comes along. Their survey covers access rules for both vertically unbundled and vertically integrated industries. It addresses the question: what happens if access is left unregulated? And it discusses the main challenges to implementation: calculating and allocating costs, finding a usage-based solution to the access pricing problem (the gl
AU - Valletti,TM
AU - Estache,A
PY - 1999///
TI - The theory of access pricing : an overview for infrastructure regulators
ER -