Givings, Takings, and the Fallacy of Forward-Looking Costs

IF 2.1 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
J. Sidak, Daniel F. Spulber
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

Mr. Sidak and Professor Spulber extend here the analysis in Deregulatory Takings and Breach of the Regulatory Contract, published last year in this Review. They respond to comments and criticisms raised not only by Professors Baumol and Merrill, but also by Judge Williams and Professor Williamson in their Comments published last year. Sidak and Spulber begin by exploring the constitutional limitations on the government's ability to redefine the public purpose to which a regulated utility has dedicated its private property. Then, the authors examine whether the government has made givings that implicitly compensate the regulated firm for its diminution in value owing to the imposition of policies mandating network unbundling at regulated prices. Sidak and Spulber refine the limiting principles for the recovery of stranded costs that they articulated in their earlier article and show how those principles reconcile with the actual treatment of losses from deregulation in disparate industries. Next, they expose the economic fallacies in the notion of forward-looking costs as that term has been used by the Federal Communications Commission and state public utility commissions to set prices for mandatory network access under the Telecommunications Act of 1996. The authors analyze the Supreme Courts 1996 decision in United States v. Winstar Corp. and argue that the reasoning employed by seven Justices in that case comports not only with earlier decisions of the Court construing the regulatory contract with public utilities, but also with the contemporary economic analysis of why the regulatory contract is essential and efficient. Sidak and Spulber explain how transition bonds may solve the stranded cost conundrum in the telecommunications and electric power industries by permitting the securitization of stranded costs in a manner that restores investors' faith in the state's ability to make credible commitments. Finally, the authors examine the significance of the Eighth Circuit's 1997 decision in Iowa Utilities Board v. FCC for the debate over deregulatory takings and breach of the regulatory contract.
给予、征收与前瞻性成本谬误
Sidak先生和Spulber教授在此扩展了去年发表在《评论》上的《解除管制性征收和违反管制性合同》一文中的分析。他们不仅回应了鲍莫尔教授和梅里尔教授的评论和批评,还回应了威廉姆斯法官和威廉姆森教授去年发表的评论。Sidak和Spulber首先探讨了宪法对政府重新定义公共目的的限制,即受监管的公用事业公司将其私有财产用于公共目的。然后,作者研究了政府是否做出了捐赠,暗中补偿了受监管公司的价值下降,这是由于强制执行以管制价格进行网络分拆的政策造成的。Sidak和Spulber完善了他们在早期文章中阐述的回收搁浅成本的限制原则,并展示了这些原则如何与不同行业放松管制造成的损失的实际处理相协调。其次,他们揭露了前瞻性成本概念中的经济谬误,因为该术语已被联邦通信委员会和州公用事业委员会用于根据1996年《电信法》为强制性网络接入设定价格。作者分析了1996年最高法院对美国诉Winstar公司案的判决,并认为该案中七位大法官所采用的推理不仅符合最高法院对与公用事业公司的监管合同的早期判决,而且也符合当代经济学对监管合同为何必不可少和有效的分析。Sidak和Spulber解释了过渡债券是如何解决电信和电力行业的搁浅成本难题的,它允许搁浅成本的证券化,从而恢复投资者对国家做出可信承诺能力的信心。最后,作者考察了1997年第八巡回法院在爱荷华州公用事业委员会诉联邦通信委员会案中关于解除管制征收和违反管制合同的辩论的决定的意义。
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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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