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9780521876698

Essentials of Modern Spectrum Management

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780521876698

  • ISBN10:

    0521876699

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2007-08-13
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Summary

Are you fully up-to-speed on today's modern spectrum management tools? As regulators move away from traditional spectrum management methods, introduce spectrum trading and consider opening up more spectrum to commons, do you understand the implications of these developments for your own networks? This is the first book to describe and evaluate modern spectrum management tools. Expert authors offer you unique insights into the technical, economic and management issues involved. Auctions, administrative pricing, trading, property rights and spectrum commons are all explained. A series of real-world case studies from around the world is used to highlight the strengths and weaknesses of the various approaches adopted by different regulators, and valuable lessons are drawn from these. This concise and authoritative resource is a must-have for telecom regulators, network planners, designers and technical managers at mobile and fixed operators and broadcasters, and academics involved in the technology and economics of radio spectrum.

Author Biography

William Webb is Head of Research and Development and Senior Technologist at Ofcom, a Visiting Professor at Surrey University and Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsp. xi
Emerging problems with the current spectrum management approachp. 1
Current spectrum management methods and their shortcomingsp. 3
Why spectrum needs to be managedp. 3
The current management mechanismsp. 4
Shortcomings of the current systemp. 6
Alternative management approachesp. 8
How this book addresses the new approachesp. 9
Referencep. 9
How changing technology is impacting spectrum managementp. 11
Technology used to lend itself to discrete allocationsp. 11
Multi-modal radiosp. 12
Cognitive and software defined radiosp. 13
Ultra-widebandp. 20
Summaryp. 23
Alternative ways of dividing spectrump. 25
Spectrum has been divided by frequencyp. 25
UWB raises the possibility of division by powerp. 26
Other divisions are also possiblep. 33
Summary: in practice, changes to spectrum division would be minorp. 34
Marketsp. 35
Market solutionsp. 37
Introductionp. 37
Market methodsp. 38
Market failuresp. 40
Conclusionp. 41
Auctionsp. 43
Introductionp. 43
Auctions versus administrative methods of assignmentp. 46
Theory of auctionsp. 49
Auction formatsp. 51
Auction logisticsp. 76
Conclusionp. 81
Referencesp. 82
Spectrum trading: secondary marketsp. 85
Introductionp. 85
Radio spectrum and market forcesp. 87
Spectrum trading, markets and efficiencyp. 88
Objections to spectrum tradingp. 92
The implementation of spectrum trading in the UKp. 94
Trading in other countriesp. 97
Conclusionp. 103
Referencesp. 104
Technical issues with property rightsp. 105
Introductionp. 105
Key elements of property rightsp. 106
The problem of deployment densityp. 110
Calculating noise floor levelsp. 112
Making a property rights system work in practicep. 112
UWB and property rightsp. 115
Managing interferencep. 116
A detailed look at the definition of property rightsp. 117
Summaryp. 121
Referencesp. 122
Economic issues with property rightsp. 123
Creating property rights: economic aspectsp. 123
Principles for the allocation of property rightsp. 124
Underlays and overlaysp. 128
Defining property rights for spectrum: commercial and economic issuesp. 131
Conclusionp. 136
Referencesp. 137
Competition issues relating to spectrump. 139
Introductionp. 139
Competition issues in a command-and-control regimep. 141
Competition issues under a market regime for spectrum managementp. 143
Spectrum capsp. 147
Conclusionsp. 148
Band managementp. 151
Introductionp. 151
Types of band managerp. 152
Fundamentals of band managementp. 154
The business case for band managementp. 157
Summary and conclusionsp. 163
Referencep. 164
Regulationp. 165
Incentive based spectrum prices: theoryp. 167
Introductionp. 167
Economic efficiency and radio spectrump. 169
Productive efficiency and radio spectrump. 171
Pricing radio spectrum to achieve economic efficiencyp. 174
The Smith-NERA method of calculating spectrum pricesp. 175
Setting spectrum prices to achieve efficiency using the Smith-NERA methodp. 178
The interaction between spectrum pricing and spectrum tradingp. 181
Conclusionp. 184
Referencesp. 185
Incentive based spectrum pricing: practicalitiesp. 187
Introductionp. 187
Applying administrative incentive prices: some issuesp. 188
Calculating AIP in practice: case study of fixed links in the UKp. 193
Incentive based spectrum charges in other countriesp. 199
Conclusionp. 200
Referencesp. 202
How the commons worksp. 203
Introductionp. 203
The economics of the commonsp. 204
The likelihood of congestion in radio spectrump. 209
Quasi-commons: UWB and cognitive radiop. 220
Summaryp. 220
Referencesp. 221
Commons or non-commons?p. 223
Introductionp. 223
The use of market mechanisms to determine the amount of spectrum commonsp. 223
The "total spectrum needed" approachp. 224
The "band-by-band" approachp. 225
Summaryp. 229
Is public sector spectrum management different?p. 231
Introductionp. 231
Is public sector spectrum special?p. 232
Intermediate steps to encourage efficiency in public sector spectrum usep. 234
Public sector incentive problemsp. 237
Conclusionsp. 238
Referencesp. 238
Are developing countries different?p. 239
Introductionp. 239
Consequences for spectrum managementp. 239
Conclusionp. 242
Referencesp. 242
Conclusionsp. 245
Conclusionsp. 247
A reminder of the problemp. 247
Key conclusionsp. 247
In summaryp. 252
Further readingp. 253
Abbreviationsp. 257
Author biographiesp. 259
Subject indexp. 263
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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