Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
556625 Telecommunications Policy 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper is a comparative analysis of the telecommunications policy-making process in China and India. Adopting an institutionalist perspective and multi-streams framework, the paper analyzes the formal structures, rule-making procedures and interest groups involved in telecommunications policy-making in the two countries, in terms of their evolution over the last two decades. Though the two systems began this period with a somewhat similar ministerial-bureaucratic decision-making model, and faced similar problems of assimilating new interest groups and responding to international pressures, the paper finds that the decision systems in the two countries evolved in significantly different directions. China's telecommunications decision-making is significantly affected by the macro level political rearrangement and is more likely to be non-incremental. On the other hand, confronted by an increasingly litigious environment and a more fractious interest group culture, India represents a somewhat classical textbook case of incremental policy making. Nevertheless, numerous challenges remain in both countries, including institutional capacity and excessive regulatory deference to political authority.

► From a comparative lens, the impact of institutional endowment on policy making is illustrated. ► The telecom policy making in India is incremental while China is more likely to be non-incremental. ► Challenges such as excessive regulatory deference to political power remain in both countries.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Information Systems
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