Spectrum Abundance and the Choice Between Private and Public Control

IF 2.1 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
S. Benjamin
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引用次数: 34

Abstract

Prominent commentators recently have proposed that the government allocate significant portions of the radio spectrum for use as a wireless commons. The problem for commons proposals is that truly open access leads to interference, which renders a commons unattractive. Those advocating a commons assert, however, that a network comprising devices that operate at low power and repeat each other's messages can eliminate the interference problem. They contend that this possibility renders a spectrum commons more efficient than privately owned spectrum, and in fact that private owners would not create these 'abundant networks' in the first place. In this Article, Professor Benjamin argues that these assertions are not well founded, and that efficiency considerations favor private ownership of spectrum. Those advocating a commons do not propose a network in which anyone can transmit as she pleases. The abundant networks they envision involve significant control over the devices that will be allowed to transmit. On the question whether private entities will create these abundant networks, commons advocates emphasize the transaction costs of aggregating spectrum, but those costs can be avoided via allotment of spectrum in large swaths. The comparative question of the efficiency of private versus public control, meanwhile, entails an evaluation of the implications of the profit motive (enhanced ability and desire to devise the best networks, but also the desire to attain monopoly power) versus properties of government action (the avoidance of private monopoly, but also a cumbersome process that can be subject to rent-seeking). Professor Benjamin contends that, on balance, these considerations favor private control. An additional factor makes the decision clearer: Abundant networks might not develop as planned, and so the flexibility entailed by private ownership—as well as the shifting of the risk of failure from taxpayers to shareholders—makes private ownership the better option. The unattractiveness of a commons for abundant networks casts serious doubt on the desirability of spectrum commons more generally. If private ownership is a more efficient means of creating abundant networks, then the same is almost certainly true for networks that run the risk of interference. Most uses of spectrum are subject to interference, so the failure of the commons advocates' arguments undermines the appeal of a commons for most potential uses of spectrum.
频谱丰度与私人和公共控制之间的选择
著名评论员最近建议政府分配相当一部分无线电频谱,作为无线公用设施使用。公地提案的问题在于,真正的开放获取会导致干扰,从而使公地缺乏吸引力。然而,那些主张共享的人断言,一个由低功耗运行的设备组成的网络可以消除干扰问题,并重复彼此的信息。他们认为,这种可能性使得频谱共享比私有频谱更有效,事实上,私有所有者一开始就不会创建这些“丰富的网络”。在这篇文章中,本杰明教授认为,这些断言是没有充分根据的,效率方面的考虑有利于频谱的私有制。那些主张共享的人并没有提出一个任何人都可以随心所欲地传播信息的网络。他们设想的海量网络涉及对允许传输的设备的重要控制。在私人实体是否会创建这些丰富的网络的问题上,公地倡导者强调了聚合频谱的交易成本,但这些成本可以通过大规模分配频谱来避免。与此同时,私人控制与公共控制效率的比较问题需要对利润动机(设计最佳网络的能力和愿望的增强,以及获得垄断权力的愿望)与政府行为属性(避免私人垄断,但也是一个可能受到寻租影响的繁琐过程)的含义进行评估。本杰明教授认为,总的来说,这些考虑有利于私人控制。另一个因素使决策更加清晰:丰富的网络可能不会按计划发展,因此私有制所带来的灵活性——以及失败的风险从纳税人转移到股东身上——使私有制成为更好的选择。对于丰富的网络来说,共享资源缺乏吸引力,这使人们对频谱共享的可取性产生了严重怀疑。如果私有制是创建丰富网络的更有效的方式,那么对于有干扰风险的网络来说,几乎肯定也是如此。频谱的大多数使用都受到干扰,因此,公地拥护者的论点的失败削弱了对频谱的大多数潜在用途的公地的吸引力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
8.30%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: The New York University Law Review is a generalist journal publishing legal scholarship in all areas, including legal theory and policy, environmental law, legal history, international law, and more. Each year, our six issues contain cutting-edge legal scholarship written by professors, judges, and legal practitioners, as well as Notes written by members of the Law Review.
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