Competitive Freedom Versus National Security Regulation

Manley R. Irwin
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Competitive Freedom Versus National Security Regulation

Manley R. Irwin
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212 PAGESANGLAIS

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  • Date de publication : Jan 23, 1989
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 212
  • Éditeur : Praeger
  • ISBN : 9780899302331
  • Dimensions : 6.13" W x 1.0" L x 9.25" H
MANLEY RUTHERFORD IRWIN is Professor of Economics at the University of New Hampshire. The author of numerous books and articles that address issues of U.S. telecommunications and public policy, he has served as consultant to the Federal Communications Commission, the Office of Telecommunications Planning, and the President's Task Force on Communications Policy
?Although this study presents some interesting comments about the telecommunications industry since divestiture, with several appendixes that illustrate bureaucratic efforts to maintain control over the industry, it is a testament to Irwin''s faith in economic freedom rather than a balanced analysis of national security policy. In 1972, the Department of Defense sided with the Bell System in opposing the author''s recommended policy in favor of divesture. Now he has made a broader study of rules and regulations adopted by various agencies of the US federal government in the name of protecting national security. While agreeing that there is some merit in controls over the export of goods that are obviously military and classified, he regrets that controls have been extended to a host of dual use'' products and manufacturing know-how, with the result that US firms are put at a competitive disadvantage in the global economy. Moreover, since security concerns also add to the costs of imported goods and services, producers are subject to a double squeeze such that overseas rivals gain sales and revenues at their expense--so much so that some competing nations perceive US regulations as the coming of a second Marshall Plan. Irwin feels that most of these controls are ill advised, and urges that public policy assert that freedom to compete and innovate in the economic arena are fundamental aspects of US national interests and security. Most useful as a secondary source for upper-division students in economics and public policy.?-Choice

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