IEEE Access (Jan 2021)

Market Analysis of MEC-Assisted Beyond 5G Ecosystem

  • Jin Nakazato,
  • Makoto Nakamura,
  • Tao Yu,
  • Zongdian Li,
  • Kazuki Maruta,
  • Gia Khanh Tran,
  • Kei Sakaguchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3068839
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 53996 – 54008

Abstract

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The quality-of-service (QoS)/quality-of-experience (QoE) demands of mobile services are soaring and have overwhelmed the obsolescent capability of 3G and 4G cellular networks. The emerging 5G networks will bring an unprecedented promotion in transmission data rates. However, the satisfaction of some service requirements is still in dilemma, especially the end-to-end (E2E) latency which varies in different applications. Multi-access edge computing (MEC), a promising technology in 5G cellular networks, can provide ultra-low E2E latency and reduce traffic load on mobile backhaul networks. The potential benefits of MEC for 5G and beyond services have been explored by preliminary studies. What remains is the uncertainty of revenue from the investment of MEC which will shake operators’ decisions about whether and how to deploy MEC in cellular networks. In this light, this paper designs a MEC-assisted 5G and beyond ecosystem inclusive of three players: private (local) telecom operators, backhaul, and cloud service owners. We propose a revenue maximization model for private (local) telecom operators and cloud service owners to minimize the cost from the end-user perspective while satisfying the latency requirement. The derived model indicates that two players’ revenues can be maximized by optimizing MEC resources and backhaul capacity. The game-theoretic analyses also reveal the optimized hybrid strategy of MEC and cloud for efficient mobile traffic management.

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