When national institutions do not matter. The importance of international factors : pricing policies
By: SEROT, Alexandre.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: December 2002Subject(s): Historical institutionalism | International Factors | Policy Change | Pricing | Regulatory Reform | TelecommunicationsJournal of European Public Policy 9, 6, p. 973-994Abstract: The article tests widely accepted contentions of historical institutionalism concerning the importance of national institutions for economic outcomes. The evolution of pricing policies of former monopolies in the British and French telecommunications sector between 1980 and 2000 is used as a case study for this purpose. The article examines both national institutional developments and the evolution of the prices of telecommunications services to demonstrate how this case challenges claims for the centrality of national institutions and their reforms. The conclusion then discusses the most convincing explanatins of the results found and outlines the implications for historical institutions, that their impacts and the effects of cross-national variance have been counterbalanced and indeed overcome by powerful international forces. They encompass technological and economic developments as well as regulatory changes at the supranational levelItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
The article tests widely accepted contentions of historical institutionalism concerning the importance of national institutions for economic outcomes. The evolution of pricing policies of former monopolies in the British and French telecommunications sector between 1980 and 2000 is used as a case study for this purpose. The article examines both national institutional developments and the evolution of the prices of telecommunications services to demonstrate how this case challenges claims for the centrality of national institutions and their reforms. The conclusion then discusses the most convincing explanatins of the results found and outlines the implications for historical institutions, that their impacts and the effects of cross-national variance have been counterbalanced and indeed overcome by powerful international forces. They encompass technological and economic developments as well as regulatory changes at the supranational level
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