Showing posts sorted by relevance for query wheeler competition. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query wheeler competition. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, September 04, 2014

FCC's Wheeler: US needs more high-speed broadband competition | PCWorld

FCC's Wheeler: US needs more high-speed broadband competition | PCWorld: U.S. residents lack meaningful choices for broadband providers that offer 25Mbps or faster download speeds, and the U.S. Federal Communications Commission will push for more competition, the agency’s chairman said Thursday.

While more than 93 percent of U.S. residents have access to a broadband provider, fewer than 15 percent can buy service from more than two wired providers that offer “yesterday’s broadband” with 4Mbps download speeds, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said during a speech at Washington, D.C., startup incubator 1776.

“At the low end of throughput ... the majority of Americans have a choice of only two providers,” Wheeler said. “That is what economists call a duopoly, a marketplace that is typically characterized by less than vibrant competition.

As long as Internet service providers own the infrastructure that connects customer premises, there will never be any meaningful degree of competition, owing to the fact that telecommunications infrastructure due to high costs and barriers to entry functions in a natural monopoly market. As Andrew Cohill wrote in his 2010 white paper, that's about as inefficient and senseless as having FedEx or UPS operate proprietary roads to serve neighborhoods that are closed to competing shipping services.

The policy of the United States has been to preserve this very market structure of which the Federal Communications Commission chair laments. What's needed to achieve any level of real competition is to encourage and fund the construction of publicly owned open access fiber to the premise networks where ISPs compete to sell services to customer premises. Call it the public option for telecommunications in the Internet age.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Why the “more competition” argument for better Internet service is misguided

Hardly a day goes by without calls for “more competition” as the elixir to make modern Internet-based telecommunications services more widely available and offering better value than those offered by the legacy incumbent telephone and cable companies. U.S. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler has curiously joined the chorus calling for more competition -- even though his agency and its 2015 Open Internet rules are predicated on regulating Internet service as a natural monopoly common carrier utility.

The problem is telecom infrastructure by nature isn’t a competitive market defined as having many sellers and buyers. There are many buyers but there cannot be many sellers because it’s too costly and economically inefficient to have multiple providers building and owning infrastructure connecting homes and businesses. More competition isn’t a solution here. 

In the states, the legacy incumbents reinforce the notion of competition by blocking projects that would threaten their service territory monopolies. From their perspective, these projects represent competition because they would potentially steal away customers. Therefore, proponents reason, competition must be a good thing if the incumbents oppose it. This however illustrates the faulty reasoning of the “more competition” argument. 

The problem is the pro-competition proponents are buying into the incumbents’ concept of competition -- and not a consumer perspective. For the incumbents, any project that would build infrastructure in their service territories is competition. However, for consumers, having a choice among many sellers is competition. That’s not possible with telecommunications infrastructure. But it is possible if the infrastructure is publicly owned like roads and highways. That would open up Internet service to competition since multiple Internet service providers could offer their services over that infrastructure.

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Tom Wheeler tells cable industry to stop complaining, start competing | Ars Technica

Tom Wheeler tells cable industry to stop complaining, start competing | Ars Technica: Part of looking forward, in Wheeler's opinion, is boosting competition. With some exceptions, cable companies have generally not competed against each other, letting a single company dominate each region instead of "overbuilding" in each other's territory.

"You don't have a lot of competition, especially at the higher speeds that are increasingly important to the consumer of online video," Wheeler said. This means there isn't the kind of "intense and constant pressure to continue to improve" as there was in the days when DSL posed a serious threat to cable, he said.
The thing is, Mr. Chairman, telecommunications infrastructure doesn't easily lend itself to competition due to the high costs to build and maintain it. It functions as a natural monopoly like roads and highways and electrical distribution infrastructure. We don't build competing thoroughfares to offer motorists the choice of taking Highway "A" and "B" and "C," for example from the same starting point to the same destination. Or multiple power lines serving the same property. Having multiple landline Internet connections passing by premises is similarly overkill and economically wasteful. Just ask any of the legacy phone companies who feel compelled to issue news releases announcing "gigabit fiber" to compete with Google Fiber. It's a helluva lot cheaper to issue a news release than to actually overbuild competing infrastructure and doesn't risk the ire of shareholders averse to big capital expenditures.

The competition Wheeler's FCC and the federal government should be supporting is helping fund the planning and construction of open access fiber to the premise telecommunications infrastructure over which Internet Service Providers would compete to sell services to customer premises. This would also potentially provide greater opportunity for new services than could be offered over a vertically integrated cable provider that owns both the pipe and the services offered over it.

FCC's Sohn: Wired Broadband Competition Lacking | Broadcasting & Cable

FCC's Sohn: Wired Broadband Competition Lacking | Broadcasting & Cable: Gigi Sohn, senior counselor to FCC chairman Tom Wheeler, told a New Haven, Conn., audience Monday that "the simple truth is that meaningful competition for high-speed wired broadband is lacking."

She came not to bury broadband, but to praise the state's 1 gig community broadband project as a way to provide that "lacking" competition.

Viewed in the context of landline Internet infrastructure as a whole, Sohn is correct. It's a natural monopoly due to high cost barriers that keep out potential competitors as well as inefficiencies that make building parallel infrastructures as nonsensical as building multiple competing roads and highways serving the same area. If they were privately owned and operated for profit -- as is most telecommunications infrastructure in the U.S. -- the likelihood of their having a net present value greater than zero is slim to none.

What this story as well as many others lamenting the lack of "broadband competition" fail to mention is how Connecticut's project does offer competition to the consumer for Internet services via open access fiber infrastructure that provides wholesale access to Internet Service Providers (ISPs) as an alternative to the vertically integrated, closed access infrastructures used by the legacy telephone and cable companies as well as Google Fiber. ISPs would then compete to sell their services to consumers. From the CT Gig Project website:
Competition:

The open-access model would introduce true competition into the Internet
marketplace. The idea is to build the infrastructure and then give Internet
providers equal access to utilize it. Your Internet choices should be made
based on price and service, not solely by the town boundaries you reside in.

Wednesday, February 03, 2016

Wheeler talking through his hat on "cable competition"

Stop the Cap! FCC Chairman Tells Crowd He's "Not Done Enough" to Bring More Cable Competition: FCC Chairman Thomas Wheeler confessed he “has not done enough” to bring consumers more competition to Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Charter, and other cable operators.

This is complete nonsense from Wheeler. Cable is not a competitive market. It exists in a natural monopoly/duopoly market. The chairman can't make it more competitive any more than he could interstate highways if were were head of the U.S. Department of Transportation.

Wheeler's view of the cable market as a competitive one is also at odds with the FCC's adoption one year ago of its Open Internet rulemaking deeming Internet service provided by cable, telephone and other ISPs a common carrier telecommunications utility under Title II of the Communications Act. That title is predicated on a monopoly -- and not a competitive -- market.

Saturday, August 19, 2023

Sohn questions key policy premise of 1996 Telecommunications Act

Gigi Sohn, executive director of the American Association of Public Broadband, made a profound observation on U.S. telecommunications policy in a podcast interview this week with Mike Masnick of TechDirt at (around 47:50)

 “The facilities-based competition when you have cable competing against telecom competing against wireless, maybe wasn’t the best idea."

Sohn is essentially -- and astutely-- questioning a fundamental policy premise of the 1996 Telecommunications Act and once held by her former boss, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler: that facilities-based competition would unleash market forces that would benefit all Americans by bringing them affordable Internet access. 

This is also referred to as "technological neutrality" in the context of subsidizing advanced telecommunications infrastructure. The assumption baked into law -- along with opening up the legacy metallic copper telephone delivery plant to Internet Service Providers -- is market competition would benefit all Americans regardless of their location by bringing them access to the then-emerging form of digital telecommunications. 

It was incorrect largely because fiber optic delivery technology existed in the 1990s that was technologically capable of modernizing the legacy copper and cable coax connections to homes, businesses and institutions. No technology has emerged since that's superior to fiber when it comes to delivering high quality, reliable digital, voice and video services.

Another fundamental flaw in this policy was seeing connectivity as a market commodity of "broadband bandwidth" instead of a natural monopoly that utilities are and where market forces don't operate to benefit buyers and instead strongly favor sellers. A single fiber connection would suffice; fiber to the premises (FTTP) should have been designated as the national telecom delivery infrastructure standard. There is no need for more than one fiber connection or other type of technologies for premise service.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Section 706 of Telecom Act offers FCC little to address telecom infrastructure deficit

Net neutrality storm engulfs FCC - POLITICO: FCC officials are meeting with congressional staff this week as Wheeler tries to better explain the options on the table to industry players and the public interest community. Across those meetings, the FCC chairman and his aides haven’t tipped their hand about how they want to proceed, according to multiple sources. The officials have given a rundown of the various options, including adopting the utility-style regulation known as Title II, using a weaker authority known as Section 706 or some combination of the two — but failed to lay out a clear path forward, the sources said.

Section 706, found in Title VII (Miscellaneous Provisions) of the Communications Act, isn't really a mandate on telecommunications providers. Rather, it merely affords the Federal Communications Commission authority to issue rules creating incentives to remove barriers to telecommunications infrastructure investment and to promote competition.

The main barrier to wireline Internet infrastructure investment that according to the FCC has left about 19 million American homes without Internet connections is economic, not regulatory. The business models of investor-owned providers typically require relatively quick return on monies invested to build infrastructure. In less densely populated areas, there is greater risk that standard won't be met, extending out the time for investors to break even and begin generating profits. No FCC rulemaking can change those economics.

The FCC provides subsidies to help bridge the gap (the Connect America Fund), but providers have generally spurned them. Instead, they've concentrated capital investments in more densely populated and profitable parts of their service territories and in mobile wireless services.

As for removing barriers to competition, there is little the FCC can do within the existing market-based model for telecommunications service. That's because telecommunications infrastructure is a natural monopoly that due to high cost and risk barriers deters would be competitors from entering the market.

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

FCC Chair Pai wrongly describes natural monopoly of telecom infrastructure as competitive market

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai on Why He's Rejecting Net Neutrality Rules - Reason.com: If left in place, however, the Title II rules could harm the commercial internet, which Pai described as "one of the most incredible free market innovations in history. Companies like Google and Facebook and Netflix became household names precisely because we didn't have the government micromanaging how the internet would operate," said Pai, who noted that the Clinton-era decision not to regulate the Internet like a phone utility or a broadcast network was one of the most important factors in the rise of our new economy.
Companies like Google (excepting Google Fiber's now defunct venture into fiber to the premise service), Facebook and Netflix aren't network providers. Consequently, they don't face the high costs associated with building and operating telecommunications infrastructure serving homes, businesses and institutions that deters market competition and promotes market failure.
Ajit Pai: The funny thing about that is because it's precisely because the phone company was a slow moving monopolist. That's exactly the point we're trying to make. These rules, Title II rules were designed to regulate Ma Bell, and the promise with Ma Bell, the deal with the government was, we'll give you a monopoly as long as you give universal service to the country. As a result, for decades, we didn't see innovation in the network we didn't see innovation in phones and it's when you have a competitive marketplace and you let go of that impulse to regulate everything preemptively, that you finally get to see more of a competitive environment.
Pai is engaging in the distortion of describing the natural monopoly market that telecommunications infrastructure is as a competitive market. Wishing it were competitive won't make it so. The cost barriers to entry are simply too high. Just ask Google Fiber. Or the 34 million Americans who have experienced sell side market failure, their homes and small business not offered landline connections capable of delivering high-quality voice, data, graphics and video, according to figures released by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission in 2016. Market failure is hardly an indicator of a robustly competitive market.

Pai's predecessor Tom Wheeler indulged in the misguided notion that telecom infrastructure could be competitive market, even though the FCC under his leadership adopted the 2015 Open Internet rulemaking predicated on regulating Internet service as a natural monopoly, classifying it as a common carrier telecommunications utility.

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Schumer: Broadband is a Utility That May Require Price Caps | DSLReports, ISP Information

Schumer: Broadband is a Utility That May Require Price Caps | DSLReports, ISP Information: Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer uttered some words this week that likely terrified lobbyists and executives for AT&T, Verizon and Comcast. During his floor argument for a Congressional Review Act resolution that would restore net neutrality, Schumer stated that he believes that broadband should be viewed as an essential utility, and that we may need to eventually explore price caps to prevent monopolies from over-charging for services thanks to limited competition.



Schumer's right. And when it's an essential service, the potential for abusive price gouging is enormous.

Democrats and Republicans alike have traditionally avoided price caps on broadband service, in large part because deep-pocketed campaign contributors in the telecom sector have viciously opposed the idea for obvious reasons.  Even when former FCC boss Tom Wheeler reclassified ISPs as common carriers under Title II of the Telecom act he was careful to "forbear" from applying rate regulation onto ISPs.

But Schumer appeared to re-open the conversation of price caps on an uncompetitive broadband market during discussions about net neutrality, even though the likelihood of him actually following through with that isn't particularly likely given historical precedent. "You know, people say, well, let a private company do whatever it wants, let them charge whatever they want," Schumer argued. "But in certain goods which are essential we don't do that. Utilities, highways. The same thing now applies to the internet. It's a necessity and we have to have protections for average folks, for small businesses, for working families." 


Spot on. It's time to end the delusion that a utility market can be a competitive market. After all, how many electric, water and natural gas companies are competing for customers?