Here is a news item about the possible take over of O2 - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-30946005
One effect, if this goes ahead, is the reduction in the number of mobile phone operators. I can remember the end of the 1970s and the 1980s when a movement to split up monopolies such as BT spread around the world. It may have started in the USA. Some benefits were intended to come out of this, though in the case of technology companies it is surely difficult to say that they did, because there have been very significant improvements which may have had nothing to do with how companies have been organised. It is not that there haven't been improvements - there have - but to attribute these to a splitting up of companies may, with hindsight, be hard to prove.
The effect of some of these measures was, initially, the formation of a modestly large number of different companies operating within one field. A few years later the smallest companies had usually withered away, while some had coalesced to form larger, more viable companies. Decades later some of the more viable companies had themselves merged, or takeovers had reduced the number of companies in the market. There may be technical differences between mergers and takeovers (I don't know), but the effect of each is to reduce the number of competing companies in each market.
Perhaps this kind of cyclic process is inevitable. It certainly seems to have happened in the phone market (land lines at first, now mobile networks as well) - so that after 20 or 30 years we are almost back to the same kind of monopoly situation which prevailed in earlier years. Does this mean that the whole effort of trying to split up large organisations is, in the long term, pointless?
One effect, if this goes ahead, is the reduction in the number of mobile phone operators. I can remember the end of the 1970s and the 1980s when a movement to split up monopolies such as BT spread around the world. It may have started in the USA. Some benefits were intended to come out of this, though in the case of technology companies it is surely difficult to say that they did, because there have been very significant improvements which may have had nothing to do with how companies have been organised. It is not that there haven't been improvements - there have - but to attribute these to a splitting up of companies may, with hindsight, be hard to prove.
The effect of some of these measures was, initially, the formation of a modestly large number of different companies operating within one field. A few years later the smallest companies had usually withered away, while some had coalesced to form larger, more viable companies. Decades later some of the more viable companies had themselves merged, or takeovers had reduced the number of companies in the market. There may be technical differences between mergers and takeovers (I don't know), but the effect of each is to reduce the number of competing companies in each market.
Perhaps this kind of cyclic process is inevitable. It certainly seems to have happened in the phone market (land lines at first, now mobile networks as well) - so that after 20 or 30 years we are almost back to the same kind of monopoly situation which prevailed in earlier years. Does this mean that the whole effort of trying to split up large organisations is, in the long term, pointless?
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