
In France, for example, the regulator forced France Télécom to rent out its lines. One small start-up firm benefited from this opportunity and then installed technology that was much faster than any of its rivals’. It won so many customers that other operators had to follow suit. In Canada, too, the regulator mandated line-sharing, and provinces subsidised trunk lines from which smaller operators could lease capacity to provide service.The duopoly will settle for the U.S. being slow and expensive as long as they get to collect the rents.— Open up those highways, The Economist print edition, Jan 17th 2008
Here’s how other countries do it: Continue reading