On the Receiver Pays Principle
UPF, Economics and Business Working Paper No. 561
40 Pages Posted: 16 Nov 2003
Date Written: March 29, 2001
Abstract
This paper extends the theory of network competition between telecommunications operators by allowing receivers to derive a surplus from receiving calls (call externality) and to affect the volume of communications by hanging up (receiver sovereignty). We investigate the extent to which receiver charges can lead to an internalization of the calling externality. When the receiver charge and the termination (access) charge are both regulated, there exists an efficient equilibrium. Efficiency requires a termination discount. When reception charges are market determined, it is optimal for each operator to set the prices for emission and reception at their off-net costs. For an appropriately chosen termination charge, the symmetric equilibrium is again efficient. Lastly, we show that network-based price discrimination creates strong incentives for connectivity breakdowns, even between equal networks.
Keywords: Networks, interconnection, competition policy
JEL Classification: D4, K21, L41, L51, L96
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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