Typically the cost of a product, a good or a service has many components. Those components come from different complex steps in the supply chain of the product from sourcing to distribution. This economic point of view also takes place in the determination of goods and services in wireless networks. Indeed, before transmitting customer data, a network operator has to lease some frequency range from a spectrum owner and also has to establish agreements with electricity suppliers. The goal of this paper is to compare two pricing schemes, namely a power-based and a flat rate, and give a possible explanation why flat rate pricing schemes are more common than power based pricing ones in a deregulated wireless market. We suggest a hierarchical game-theoretical model of a three level supply chain: the end users, the service provider and the spectrum owner. The end users intend to transmit data on a wireless network. The amount of traffic sent by the end users depends on the available frequency bandwidth as well as t
Язык оригиналаанглийский
Название основной публикацииThe 7th International Conference on Performance Evaluation Methodologies and Tools Proceedings (ValueTools '13), December 10-12, 2013, Turin, Italy
ИздательICST
Страницы126-135
DOI
СостояниеОпубликовано - 2013

ID: 4727093