Research and Applications
PERC is a non-profit organization dedicated to finding Information Solutions for Development Challenges worldwide. Going beyond the standard think tank model of solely carrying out research and producing reports, our staff develops real-world applications and works with policy makers at all levels to bring about the change we seek.
Find out more: About PERC
Serving the Missing Middle
PERC's mission is to serve the Missing Middle, the almost 4 billion people above the global poverty line who do not have access to affordable mainstream credit, by utilizing a new type of economic development: information-led development.
Find out more: Information-Led Development, Who are the missing middle?
Overcoming the Catch-22
Up to 70 million Americans are excluded from the financial mainstream because of the Credit Catch-22: you need to have a history of debt to get credit. PERC's Alternative Data Initiative has already helped many Americans overcome this Catch-22 and access affordable mainstream credit.
Find out more: Alternative Data Initiative
Smart Disaster Recovery
PERC has developed metrics for the Louisiana Recovery Agency and the World Bank to track small business recovery from natural disasters.
Find out more: Gulf Coast Economic Renewal
Donate to PERC
You can help support PERC's mission of global asset building by donating via Paypal. PERC is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization incorporated in the state of North Carolina. All donations are tax deductible.
January 3, 2003 (New York)
The Information Policy Institute yesterday filed comments to the Federal Communications Commission strongly urging the Commission to forestall any intended relaxation of existing media ownership rules. The Institute warned that a substantial relaxation of these rules could yield results that are contrary to the public interest.
"This Commission is about to throw the media and communications industries off the cliffs of competition into the abyss of consolidation," said Institute President and Senior Scholar Dr. Michael Turner. "The only beneficiaries of further media consolidation will be the mega-media giants such as Disney, Viacom, Newscorp and their shareholders. By contrast, the average consumer, who relies on a variety of media outlets for news and entertainment, will get stuck holding the bag - paying more for less," Turner argued.
"Consumers are harmed in two arenas," said Turner. "Consolidation will lead to less viewpoint diversity in media, undermining the quantity and quality of information available to the public with harmful consequences for our nation's democratic discourse. Increased concentration also means higher subscription rates, which could deny many Americans access to a full range of news and information sources. In such a world, we fully anticipate the emergence of an 'Information Divide,'" added Turner.
"We commend the Commission for raising important issues and demonstrating a capacity for creative thinking," added Turner. "We don't see any good coming out of increased media consolidation. Already, in local markets for radio and cable television, there is increasing evidence of abusive and anticompetitive behavior. Should the Commission move forward and relax existing ownership rules, we fully expect more of this type of behavior," said Turner.
The Institute's comments also take issue with both the theoretical and empirical support for relaxing the ownership rules contained in the Commission's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. "The Commission is justifying a regulatory regime change for the 'New Economy' based upon two 50-year old theories - one of which has been empirically discredited and the other misrepresented," added Dr. Turner. The referenced theories are, respectively, from economists Peter O. Steiner and Joseph Schumpeter.
Many of the FCC's Media Ownership Working Group studies, initiated by the Commission to guide its decision-making on the four media ownership rules currently under review, are analyzed and critiqued in the Institute's comments. In general, the Institute's analysis found these studies inconclusive, highly speculative, and occasionally contradictory. The Institute's comments also point out that, in at least some cases analyzed by the Media Ownership Working Group, consumer welfare is clearly harmed by increased media consolidation.
Asia-Pacific Credit Coalition
APCC is a PERC-managed coalition committed to promoting a regional standard for full-file, comprehensive consumer credit reporting to private credit bureaus within the 21 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) member economies. Please visit PERC's coalition for credit standards in the APEC region, the Asia-Pacific Credit Coalition