Interests, Wireless Technology, and Institutional Change: From Government Monopoly to Regulated Competition in Indian Telecommunications

This paper explores the causes behind the institutional change that promoted regulated private-sector competition in India's booming telecommunications sector This change occurred incrementally by resolving conflicts of interest driven by the twin engines of fiscal crisis and technological change in cellular tel ephony. The Prime Minister's Office and the Ministry of Finance pushed for the change, whereas the Department of Telecommunications resisted it. As private participation succeeded, the relationship between the private sector and govern ment financial organizations made a significant impact on parts of the govern ment that favored change. Cellular technology offered the private sector with a first-mover's advantage because it had gambled on it when government-owned corporations had ignored its commercial potential. Evolutionary change occurred through a process of institutional layering that involved establishing new institutions along the edges of old ones and allowing them to grow differen tially. The pace of institutional change accelerated in times of financial crises when the mismatch between policy intention and institutions led to a withdrawal of private investment.

[1]  J. Ruggie International regimes, transactions, and change: embedded liberalism in the postwar economic order , 1982, International Organization.

[2]  P. Hall,et al.  Varieties of Capitalism , 2001 .

[3]  R. Mukherji Managing Competition: Politics and the Building of Independent Regulatory Institutions , 2004 .

[4]  B. Petrazzini,et al.  TELECOMMUNICATIONS POLICY IN INDIA: THE POLITICAL UNDERPINNINGS OF REFORM , 1996 .

[5]  G. Garrett,et al.  Partisan Politics in the Global Economy , 1998 .

[6]  P. Pierson Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis , 2004 .

[7]  Mb Athreya India's telecommunications policy: A paradigm shift , 1996 .

[8]  Nikhilesh Sinha,et al.  The political economy of India's telecommunication reforms , 1996 .

[9]  R. Mukherji The Politics of Telecommunications Regulation: State–Industry Alliance Favouring Foreign Investment in India , 2008 .

[10]  D. Kapur,et al.  Public institutions in India : performance and design , 2007 .

[11]  P. Pierson Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics , 2000, American Political Science Review.

[12]  Anupama Dokeniya,et al.  Re-forming the state: telecom liberalization in India , 1999 .

[13]  P. Pierson The New Politics of the Welfare State , 1996, World Politics.

[14]  V. Joshi India: Macroeconomics and Political Economy 1964-1991 , 1994 .

[15]  Kathryn Sikkink Ideas and Institutions: Developmentalism in Brazil and Argentina , 1992 .

[16]  Mark Blyth,et al.  Great Transformations: Economic Ideas and Institutional Change in the Twentieth Century , 2002 .

[17]  A. Greif,et al.  A Theory of Endogenous Institutional Change , 2004, American Political Science Review.

[18]  P. Hall Policy paradigms, social learning, and the state: the case of economic policymaking in Britain , 1993 .

[19]  D. North Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance: Economic performance , 1990 .

[20]  P. David Clio and the Economics of QWERTY , 1985 .

[21]  Ralph E. Stablein,et al.  Organizing America: Wealth, Power, and the Origins of Corporate Capitalismby PerrowCharles. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002. , 2003 .

[22]  John L. Campbell Institutional Change and Globalization , 2020 .

[23]  Sueo Sudo,et al.  Ideas and Foreign Policy , 1995 .

[24]  J. P. Singh Leapfrogging Development?: The Political Economy of Telecommunications Restructuring , 1999 .

[25]  Douglass C. North,et al.  Constitutions and Commitment: The Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in Seventeenth-Century England , 1989, The Journal of Economic History.

[26]  E. Schickler Disjointed Pluralism: Institutional Innovation and the Development of the U.S. Congress , 2001 .

[27]  Wolfgang Streeck,et al.  Introduction: Institutional Change in Advanced Political Economies , 2005 .