Innovators and Incumbents: Can Telecom Reform Bring Big Broadband To Every U.S. Home and Business?
Event
The rapid development of Internet applications and digital convergence has already rendered the Telecom Act of 1996 largely obsolete and a source of contentious regulatory uncertainty. Sen. Ted Stevens, the likely new Senate Commerce Committee Chairman, is expected to initiate a major debate on overhauling the Act next year. Voice over IP and the potential for wireless broadband as an alternative last-mile pipe further complicate the policy debate.
What kind of deregulation - or re-regulation - is best for stimulating innovation and economic growth? What policies can best facilitate new IT applications and products that leverage the Internet and boost U.S. competitiveness? Should policy makers focus on facilitating investment by telecom incumbents, or work to reduce barriers to entry toward attracting venture capital and innovative startups? Is the current telecom and media regulatory mix even the most important problem - or is it instead the need to get an affordable "Big Broadband" pipe (20 Mbps or faster) into every home and business?
Our panel - moderated by Business Week Chief Economist Michael Mandel - will look ahead at the coming Congressional debate over the future of telecom and media regulation.
Location
The New America Foundation
1630 Connecticut Ave., NW 7th Floor
Washington, DC, 20009See map: Google Maps
Participants
- Blair Levin
Managing Director, Legg Mason; and Former FCC Chief of Staff - Daniel Berninger
Senior Analyst, Tier1 Research and Co-Founder, Vonage - Randolph J. May
Senior Fellow & Director of Communications Policy Studies, Progress & Freedom Foundation - Michael Mandel
Chief Economics Editor, Business Week, and Author, Rational Exuberance