Frontier Veröffentlichungen
- Scorched earthCoping with hosepipe bansBulletin | 05.04.2012.
- A framework for the evaluation of smart gridsA report prepared for Ofgem | 19.03.2012.
- Present values - the economics of ChristmasBulletin | 14.12.2011.
- A framework for the evaluation of smart gridsA consultation document prepared for OfgemPräsentation | 23.11.2011.
- The price is wrongTHE COST OF ELECTRICITY MARKET REFORM IN BRITAINBulletin | 18.10.2011.
- The way to RIIOUSING OUTPUTS IN UK ENERGY NETWORK REGULATIONBulletin | 18.10.2011.
- Pressing the switches Increasing competition in retail bankingBulletin | 05.10.2011.
- Connecting for growthThe role of Britain's hub airport in economic recovery | 22.09.2011.
- English Premium League – Frontier Economics bulletinWhy clubs pay more for English footballersBulletin | 08.09.2011.
- War and peaceThe economic cost of a return to conflict in SudanBulletin | 07.07.2011.
Stuck in Neutral?
The future of internet user chargesNew habits, demands and devices that allow internet access everywhere are rapidly increasing traffic. The need for new infrastructure to cope with bandwidth-hungry applications and customers has raised the stakes in the debate about who should pay. So-called “net neutrality” advocates maintain that internet service providers should only charge end-users. Others argue that content providers, such as Google, should bear some of the cost. This bulletin examines the competing policy options.
frontier bulletin - stuck in neutral.pdf |


frontier bulletin - stuck in neutral.pdf



