Title :
Competition in secondary spectrum markets: Price war or market sharing?
Author :
Kavurmacioglu, Emir ; Alanyali, Murat ; Starobinski, David
Author_Institution :
Div. of Syst. Eng., Boston Univ., Boston, MA, USA
Abstract :
Recent initiatives allow cellular providers to offer spot service of their licensed spectrum, paving the way to dynamic secondary spectrum markets. This paper characterizes market outcomes when multiple providers are drawn into competition for secondary demand. We study a game-theoretic model in which each provider aims to enhance its revenue by opportunistically serving secondary demand, while also serving dedicated primary demand. The secondary demand is a function of the price being charged. We consider two philosophies for sharing spectrum between primary and secondary demand: In coordinated access, spectrum providers have the option to decline a secondary access request if that helps enhance their revenue. We explicitly characterize a break-even price such that profitability of secondary access provision is guaranteed if secondary access is priced above the break-even price, regardless of the volume of secondary demand. Consequently, we establish that competition among providers that employ coordinated access leads to a price war. In particular market sharing above the break-even price is not an equilibrium outcome. This conclusion is valid for arbitrary secondary-demand functions. While the demand function does not play a part in determining the winner, it does affect the price of secondary access as exercised by the winning provider. In uncoordinated access, primary and secondary users share spectrum on equal basis, akin to the sharing modality of ISM bands. We demonstrate that market equilibrium in an uncoordinated access setting can be fundamentally different as it opens up the possibility of providers sharing the market at higher prices.
Keywords :
game theory; pricing; radio spectrum management; ISM bands; arbitrary secondary demand function; break even price; coordinated access; dynamic secondary spectrum market; game theory; licensed spectrum; market equilibrium; market sharing; primary demand; primary users; revenue; secondary access; secondary users; spectrum provider; spectrum sharing; uncoordinated access; Educational institutions; Games; Licenses; Optimized production technology; Pricing; Shape; Systems engineering and theory;
Conference_Titel :
Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks (DYSPAN), 2012 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Bellevue, WA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4447-0
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4446-3
DOI :
10.1109/DYSPAN.2012.6478168