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POLICY BACKGROUND Unlike most other economic Liberalisation measures, LLU involves more, not less, regulation. It is considered an application of the " Essential Facilities " doctrine found in U.S. and, arguably, EC Antitrust Law . LLU is generally opposed by the ILECs, which in most cases used to be state monopoly enterprises before the telecommunications sector was liberalised. They argue that LLU amounts to a Regulatory Taking , that they are forced to provide competitors with essential business inputs, that LLU stifles infrastructure-based competition and technical innovation because new entrants prefer to 'parasitise' the incumbent's network instead of building their own and that the regulatory interference required to make LLU work (e.g. to set the price) is detrimental to the market. New entrants, on the other hand, argue that, since they cannot economically duplicate the incumbent's Local Loop , they cannot actually provide certain services, such as ADSL , without LLU, thus allowing the incumbent to monopolise the respective market and stifle innovation. They point out that alternative access technologies, such as Wireless Local Loop (WLL) have proven uncompetitive and/or impractical, and that under current pricing models, the incumbent is guaranteed a fair price for the use of his facilities, including an appropriate return on investment. Finally, they argue that the ILECs generally did not construct their local loop in a competitive, risk-fraught environment, but under state monopoly protection and using taxpayer money, which means - according to the new entrants - that ILECs ought not to be entitled to continue to extract monopoly rents from the local loop. Most developed nations, including the USA and the EU Member States, have introduced regulatory frameworks providing for LLU. Given the above-mentioned problems, regulators face the challenging task of regulating a market that is changing very rapidly, without stifling any type of innovation, and without improperly disadvantaging any competitor. UNBUNDLING DEVELOPMENTS AROUND THE WORLD U.K. As of 14 January 2006 , 210,000 local loop connections have been 'unbundled' from BT operation under local loop unbundling. Ofcom hopes that 1 million local loop connections will be unbundled by June 2006. By the end of Februrary 2006, the number of unbundled lines had increased to 300,000. U.S. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requires that ILECs lease local loops to Competitors at a certain pre-set Wholesale price. New Zealand The , one third of which are to be wholesaled through other providers. As of November 2005 Telecom looks to be falling short of that target, leading to the possibility of unbundling in the future. Ihug has now also started a campaign for Local Loop Unbundling after rejecting Telecom's new wholesale plans. New Zealand is one of the few OECD countries that have examined and then rejected local loop unbundling. Switzerland Switzerland is one of a very few OECD nations that does not presently provide for unbundling, because the Swiss Federal Supreme Court held in 2001 that the 1996 Swiss Telecommunications Act does not require it. The Government has enacted an ordinance providing for unbundling in 2003, and an amendment to the Act is underway in Parliament. Unbundling requests under the 2003 ordinance continue to be tied up before the Supreme Court. Hong Kong At the meeting of the Executive Council on 6 July 2004 , the Council advised and the Chief Executive ordered that the regulatory intervention under the current Type II interconnection (Hong Kong/ Traditional Chinese :第二類互連) policy applicable to telephone exchanges for individual buildings covered by such exchanges should be withdrawn, subject to conditions documented in http://www.ofta.gov.hk/tas/interconnect/ta20040706.pdf. Germany Details on the actual situation of LLU in Germany can be found at: http://www.regtp.de/en/reg_tele/start/fs_05.html. WTO Some provisions of WTO telecommunications law can be read to require unbundling:
The question has not been settled before a WTO judicial body, and, at any rate, these obligations only apply where the respective WTO Member has committed itself to open its basic telecommunications market to competition. About 80 (mostly developed) Members have done so since 1998. REFERENCES |
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