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Is the FCC prolonging the telecom slump?

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John Judis makes the case in the New Republic. He argues that under current Chairman Michael Powell, the commission is trying to replace the freewheeling, innovation-rich Wild West that emerged after the breakup of AT&T with a series of information duopolies (typically, one phone company and one cable company in a given area):
If you want an analogy for what Powell is trying to do, you have to look at the Bell system before the breakup of AT&T in 1982 or to the French telecommunication monopoly in the '90s. AT&T was broken up partly because its monopoly was stunting innovation and removing competition. Long-distance prices fell 40 percent in the decade after AT&T's breakup. Similarly, French Telecom once boasted about its Minitel network, which since 1981 provided text-based, monochrome information services. But by the mid-'90s its monopoly held back the introduction of the Internet, a far better medium for conveying information. The U.S. telecom industry could eventually suffer similar obsolescence under Powell's plans for new consolidated regional monopolies.
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