Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Concentrated, yes, but competitive? FCC mum on wireless industry

By | June 28, 2011, 5:51am PDT

Summary: A new report from the Federal Communications Commission indicates that it remains neutral on the competitiveness of the wireless industry. Will AT&T’s acquisition of T-Mobile change that?

As wireless giant AT&T moves to acquire smaller rival T-Mobile, a new report from the Federal Communications Commission indicates that the regulatory body remains officially neutral on the issue of whether the wireless industry is competitive or not.

In its 15th Annual Mobile Wireless Competition Report, regulators wrote yesterday that there’s little doubt that the wireless phone market has become more concentrated in recent years.

But is it competitive?

The FCC acknowledged that it considered the wireless phone sector “effectively competitive” for the years leading up to 2010.

It wrote:

The mobile wireless ecosystem is sufficiently complex and multi-faceted that it would not be meaningful to try to make a single, all inclusive finding regarding effective competition that adequately encompasses the level of competition in the various interrelated segments, types of services, and vast geographic areas of the mobile wireless industry.

But in one of few hints within the report as to the commission’s position on the pending $39 billion AT&T-T-Mobile merger, the commission said that mergers don’t necessarily reduce competition.

From the report:

A merger can potentially form a stronger provider that restrains competitors from engaging in anticompetitive behavior, or may increase the likelihood that the merged firm may itself, or in coordination with other firms, would obtain or maintain market power.

Following the report, a few key players weighed in.

They said:

  • CTIA: “While CTIA again wishes they would have concluded effective competition existed in 2009, consumers clearly enjoyed more advanced handsets, an ever-expanding range of services and applications and more robust networks, even as the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that prices decreased…the wireless ecosystem continues to work for America and Americans.”
  • Verizon: “Our competitors aren’t just other wireless-network providers, as this report seems to indicate. Today wireless competition comes from cable companies; Wi-Fi and satellite service providers; handset, tablet and laptop manufacturers; operating system and application designers, and many others.”

Still, the situation remains precarious. According to the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index – calculated by summing the squared market shares of all companies in any given market — the industry closed out 2010 in a “highly concentrated” state.

(The index is a commonly used measure of industry concentration; “unconcentrated” is considered a score of less than 1500; “moderate concentration” between 1500 and 2500; “highly concentrated” above 2500. The industry has been highly concentrated since 2005.)

The question of course is how the AT&T-T-Mobile merger will affect HHI. If it sends it out of whack, there’s little doubt the deal is harmful to the market…unless it’s not, per the FCC’s statement above.

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Topics

Andrew J. Nusca is associate editor of ZDNet and editor of SmartPlanet.

Disclosure

Andrew Nusca

Andrew J. Nusca does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew J. Nusca is an associate editor at ZDNet and editor of SmartPlanet. As a journalist based in New York City, he has written for Popular Mechanics and Men's Vogue and his byline has appeared in New York magazine, The Huffington Post, New York Daily News, Editor & Publisher, New York Press and many others. He also writes The Editorialiste, a media criticism blog.

He is a New York University graduate and former news editor and columnist of the Washington Square News. He is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He has been named "Howard Kurtz, Jr." by film critic John Lichman despite having no relation to him. He lives in his native Philadelphia with his wife, cat and Boston Terrier.

Follow him on Twitter.

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RE: Concentrated, yes, but competitive? FCC mum on wireless industry
mrmilll 6th Nov
This tutorial is very much helpfull
ship steel
FCC is "Big Business" as usual.
The FCC has consistently shown me that government regulators are for sale. I really don't know what an effective third way forward is that doesn't open our government to sale by the highest bidder, and it saddens me.

At this point regulatory capture has moved so far that it's almost irreversible.
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Concentrated?
johncpm@... 28th Jun
What the hell does that mean?
@johncpm@...

It means AT&T concentrated enough money on the FCC board members to get a ruling in their favor.
0 Votes
+ -
I was a Cingular Customer for many years and moved to Tmoble after AT&T acquired that company. I averaged 10 dropped calls a week and frequently experienced frustration when calling Customer Service regarding service problems and billing errors. The impact upon the T-mobile customers will be negative not just because of costs but because of the poor service record which is At&t's legacy. It is also curious to me that the FCC does not consider the merger to be detrimental to competition when T moble has competed head to head on prices with AT & T for the past three years. I will definitly jump to another provider if At & T is allowed to acquire T-Mobile.
This tutorial is very much helpfull
ship steel

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