David Mark Kennet is an independent economic consultant. He has previously served on the faculties of three universities and written a number of professional journal articles and has authored or co-authored two books.
Kennet began working at the Pennsylvania Governor’s Energy Council in 1980. After completing his doctoral degree at Wisconsin, he began an academic career at the University of California, Santa Cruz economics department. Kennet began his collaboration with David Gabel during these years, a collaboration which continues to bear investigative fruit throughout Kennet’s career in economics and regulation. He spent several years afterward at Tulane University’s economics department. Moving to Washington, Kennet worked for a number of years as a researcher at the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and was seconded briefly to the U.S. Bureau of the Census to work as a researcher in the Center for Economic Studies. In 1997, Kennet accepted a position as senior economist at the Federal Communications Commission, where he was part of a group of economists and engineers who developed the Hybrid Cost Proxy Model, a network simulation tool utilized for determining the forward-looking economic cost of telecommunications networks. HCPM was a logical extension of Kennet’s earlier work with David Gabel in the development of another network simulation tool, the Local Exchange Cost Optimization Model. While at the FCC, Kennet taught graduate econometrics at Johns Hopkins University as an adjunct professor. Leaving the FCC, Kennet accepted a position as associate professor at the George Washington University in the graduate telecommunications program while working as an outside consultant to the World Bank. During this period, Kennet developed the early versions of the Wireless Cost Optimization Model. In 2001, Kennet was offered a position as a special economic advisor to Osiptel, the Organismo Supervisor para la Inversión Privada en Telecomunicaciones, in Lima, Peru. In 2004, Kennet became an independent consultant, specializing in the economic analysis of regulated industries in general and telecommunications in particular, working both completely independently and as part of various groups and teams. Kennet was invited to speak to the Peruvian Congress in November 2008 on the issue of numerical portability, and was interviewed by the Peruvian daily Expreso, and the Mexican television station Televisa. He was also interviewed by Peruvian Channel 7 on the possibility of implementing free internet in Peru.
Countries
Kennet has worked in over twenty countries as a consultant or professor. These include Armenia and Zambia, as well as Peru, Ecuador, Mexico, Portugal, Argentina, and wide swathes of the Middle East and Africa as well as others.2
Selected publications
“Cargos de Interconexión Eficientes y Cargos por Capacidad en Telecomunicaciones,” Revista de Regulación en Infraestructura de Transporte, 2008.
“Efficient Interconnection Charges and Capacity-Based Pricing”, International Economics and Economic Policy, 2007.
Cost Proxy Models and Telecommunications Policy: A New Empirical Approach to Regulation, MIT Press, 2002.
“Beyond the Rhetoric: An Introduction to TELRIC”, Review of Network Economics, 2002.
“The Potential Role of Economic Cost Models in the Regulation of Telecommunications in Developing Countries”, Information Economics and Policy 14, 2002, pp. 21–38.
“Computer Modeling of the Forward-Looking Economic Cost of Local Exchange Telephone Networks: An Optimization Approach”, Telecommunication Systems, 2001.
“The Effect of Cellular Service on the Cost Structure of a Land-Based Telephone Network”, Telecommunications Policy, 1997.
“Fully Distributed Cost Pricing, Ramsey Pricing, and Shapley Value Pricing: A Simulated Welfare Analysis for the Telephone Exchange”, Review of Industrial Organization, 1997.