Developments in telecommunications have moved at breakneck speed, bringing the wonders of modern technology to all aspects of our lives. Yet the American people are being deprived of the full benefits of the information revolution because government continues to regulate electronic communications. With the passage of the 1992 Cable Act, the regulatory stranglehold is actually getting tighter.
Gasman's lively and optimistic book shows that bureaucrats have neither the information nor the incentive to intelligently guide the information revolution and therefore the only alternative is the free market.
Telecompetition explains:
- How bureaucrats slow down progress to keep up with it;
- How technological changes are erasing the boundaries between voice, video, text, and data communications;
- Why large telecommunications companies are seldom monopolistic and that electromagnetic spectrum is anything but scarce;
- Why the French Minitel system is not an argument for government subsidies;
- How the Clinton/Gore concept of using tax dollars to build an information superhighway will in fact slow down its development;
- How regulatory harassment will also threaten freedom of speech.
"Telecompetition" is not a luxury; it is an absolute necessity in the modern world. This book is nothing less than a manifesto on behalf of progress.
Lawrence Gasman
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Category: Civics
Format: Book (Paperback) (230)
Publisher: Cato Institute
Date Published: Jan 13, 1994
Language: English
ISBN: 9781882577095
SKU: LT-2344
Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.00 x 0.50 (in)
Weight: 10.20 oz