[IP] THE INEVITABILITY OF BIG BROADBAND
Date: Fri, 12 Dec 2003 20:42:52 -0800
From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
[Note: This is a bit longer item then I usually post to this list.
However, I don't have a pointer to it on-line, so here it is in its
entirety. It well worth reading as it covers Hundt's reactions to the
recent Dec. 1st VoIP hearing at the FCC. DLH]
THE INEVITABILITY OF BIG BROADBAND
REED HUNDT
NEW AMERICA FOUNDATION
DECEMBER 10, 2003
Author's Acknowledgment: A form of this piece was originally written by
Professor Hundt for a colloquium at Harvard Business School in April 2003,
The Bandwidth Explosion: Living and Working in a Broadband World, and will
appear in a forthcoming book with the same title. The author would like to
thank Professor Stephen Bradley of Harvard Business School. Still another
form will appear in the Yale Journal of Regulation, December 2003.
All new media, taught Marshall McLuhan, are destined to subsume and extend
all old media, and to use the old media as their content, much like large
fish filling their stomachs with small fish. The fish metaphor belongs to
me, not McLuhan, since he was rarely so dull in his imagery.
The big fish of today is Big Broadband - access to the Web at 10 to 100
megabits per second for homes and 1 to 10 gigabits per second for
businesses. The small fish are broadcast, DSL, cable modem, and voice.
The questions are not whether Big Broadband will swallow the fish, and
perhaps the whole ocean, but how, when and by whom will the swallowing be
done? Who will create value and who will capture it? How much capital will
regulation and market failures cause to be wasted in the process? Lastly,
will we include all Americans in the new medium, so as to create community
and greater social value? And if all Americans, rich and not rich, urban
and rural, are eventually weaved into the fabric of Big Broadband, will
that happen at more or less the same rate for all, or will Big Broadband be
distributed like the benefits of the Big Tax Cuts of 2001 - that is, on a
trickle down basis.
The answers to these questions will define not only Information and
Communications Technology ("ICT") policy, but also a major part of
America's domestic and economic policy.
Since the beginning of convergence, dated from about 1992 (plus or minus
a year), the battle to be the primary medium of at least the next decade -
the one we are in now - has raged among various antipodal rivals: content
vs. conduit, local vs. long distance, wireless vs. wire, data vs. voice
also sort of known as packet vs. circuit, communications vs. computing,
network vs. edge, and copper vs. hfc (also known as telco vs. cable).
Other, possibly lesser dialectics include satellite vs. terrestrial and
broadcast vs. cable. Convergence describes then a clash of networks,
businesses, and even cultures.
As the convergence story evolves, a synthesis emerges. It is the next
generation network that can be discerned in the fog of the future. Its
lineaments are 10 to 100 megabits per second to the home, 1 to 10 gigabits
a second to the enterprise, IP protocols, packets of course but more
edge-centric than switch-centric in terms of control, wireless home and
business LANs fanning out like peacocks' tails from the edge of the wire
network, fiber fairly far to the edge, computing everywhere, software
gluing the contraption together, and myriad handheld or hand-carried
devices connecting all the time anywhere to the Net, the Web, the world's
devices and users.
This is what I'm calling the Big Broadband network. In my shorthand it is
10/100 at home, 1/10 at work, and wireless all around.
It is not Little Broadband. Little Broadband is the thin stream of data
sold as DSL or cable modem, not amounting to much more than, if even equal
to, 1 megabit per second to a home. Big Broadband is to Little Broadband as
a SUV is to a motorcycle. Big Broadband can carry full motion video,
download pictures of Paris or Hilton Hotels or Paris Hilton (whoever that
is), and provide web page access that feels like flipping pages of a magazine.
Little Broadband can do voice over the Internet, but otherwise is painfully
slow. It is no more a new medium in comparison to narrowband than was, for
instance, the kinescope was as to still photographs.
Given the power of technological change, the Big Broadband network surely
will reach some people fairly soon. Indeed, it already exists within some
college campuses, some corporate parks, and in parts of Seoul and Tokyo.
But Little Broadband is the concern of FCC policy. I think that's
wrong-headed. Big Broadband is what we want to be focused on. It is the big
fish that will swallow all the little ones.
However, Big Broadband is the common if unstated theme of two topics that
are under discussion in government: namely, the so-called HDTV transition
and the VOIP threat to universal service.
All of us can readily agree that in order to distribute high definition
video and high quality voice the optimal physical medium is Big Broadband.
Since the FCC is bent on causing both high definition television and voice
to be provided to everyone in America at affordable prices, such that 95%
of so take the services, then plainly the cheapest way to get that result
is to send the video bits and the voice bits over the same high bandwidth
network. Moreover, the Big Broadband network would have plenty of capacity
left over to permit end users to obtain very high speed access to the Internet.
So that's the result the FCC, the firms, the consumers, the country should
want: a Big Broadband network that will carry high definition broadcast
channels for free on the pipe instead of over the air, that will give every
end user limitless voice at very low cost, and that will provide high speed
Internet access at one or two orders of magnitude faster than commercially
available today.
This network would be optimally efficient. It would be a platform for new
innovative services, such as rich interactive gaming. It would greatly
increase e-commerce, producing higher gdp. It would create new jobs in the
United States. It would ensure broadcast penetration at nearly 100%, local
voice penetration at nearly 100%, and push Internet access at least to 90%
if not 100%.
The key task of the FCC should be to unwrite old rules and write a few new
rules so as to create clear incentives for existing network operators and
service providers to build a Big Broadband network.
Regulation negatively influences Big Broadband business plans. Currently
federal and state regulation causes consumers and taxpayers to pay
staggering sums to sustain old networks when much less money could pay for
the same services plus additional services and also for the cost of
building Big Broadband to every home and business. Because of regulation
and market failures, the demand that should fund Big Broadband does not
create a supply of Big Broadband.
A particularly discouraging example of the negative effect regulators are
having on Big Broadband was the FCC's December 1, 2003 forum on Voice over
the Internet. The chair, and many others, talked about trying to balance
regulation and deregulation. But the invention of VOIP - voice over a high
speed Internet access connection - actually means that state and federal
regulations that subsidize and guarantee affordable local telephone service
should be junked. Instead, if state and federal authorities want to assure
that everyone can buy voice service, they should write rules to subsidize
Big Broadband connections, through which voice can be provided at a
fraction of the cost of maintaining today's legacy networks.
Instead, based on what I heard from the December 1, 2003, forum, many heads
nodded in collective agreement that VOIP might have to be burdened with
such out-of-date regulations as access charges in order to generate money
that could go to sustaining the soon-to-be-out-of-date legacy voice
network. And I did not hear that anyone said what should be said: let
governments describe how they can help firms move all voice traffic on to
new Big Broadband networks that reach all Americans, while maintaining or
increasing shareholder value and network reliability.
The current VOIP conversation at the FCC and in state commissions is as if
government responded to Henry Ford's new invention of the automobile by
discouraging the construction of roads, and instead taxing cars in order to
subsidize canals and railroads. As a former government official I can only
say: We can do better.
How should government be working on what should be the convergence of Big
Broadband with existing voice, broadcast, and Internet access?
Let's start with the math. It will show that Big Broadband does not require
a new subsidy. The taxpayers anwhat they now pay for network services. They will be able to pay much less.
Governments and firms just have to change both regulation and market
structures in order to make way for the new Big Broadband network.
Say every household today pays $40 a month for voice. That's conservative.
We are all conservatives now. That totals $4 billion a month, or roughly
$250 billion over five years. I am giving five years for firms -- they can
be today's telephone or cable businesses -- to build a Big Broadband
network. That $250 billion can help pay for VOIP over Big Broadband and of
course for the underlying physical network itself.
Next, thanks to our FCC, the taxpayer has given about $70 billion of free
spectrum to broadcasters and the consumer has been ordered to pay about $20
billion for over-the-air digital tuners for 200 million televisions over
roughly five years. That's $90 billion out of pocket for taxpayers and
consumers. It is not too late to redirect that money toward paying for the
Big Broadband network. On that network broadcasters can get free high
definition TV carriage. They have that on analog cable; they are inside
satellite packages. Why not give them free access to the Big Broadband
network. That should make broadcasters and TV households happy. In return
we can get back the high definition spectrum, sell it, and use the proceeds
to help pay for Big Broadband to high cost rural and poor homes. And we
could even repeal what I call the "tuner tax." We are all tax-cutters in
Washington now.
We have still more money to deploy. On average over the next five years,
about 60 million households will pay about $25 a month for Little Broadband
- the low speed Internet access that we are being offered instead of Big
Broadband. The retail price may be higher and the penetration rate may be
higher, but we are all conservatives now. So that totals over five years
about $90 billion. All that can pay for Big Broadband, which subsumes
Little Broadband.
That totals $410 billion in money that as of now will be dedicated to
supporting a voice network from the 19th century, a broadcast business from
the mid 20th century, and broadband access technologies from at least a
decade ago. (That is even after I repealed the "tuner tax.")
For probably one-fourth that sum, firms could build fiber to the fingertips
of everyone in America. Governments, and fir ms, need only to figure out
how to let the demand be aggregated in pursuit of Big Broadband and how
suppliers can cooperate to meet the demand.
Please notice customers would still have to pay for cable channels,
advanced communications services, and internet applications over the big
Broadband network, but that is what we want: value added services that grow
the economy, add jobs and increase productivity.
The high calling and critical task of federal and state government, then,
is how to unwrite rules or write rules - in short how to create the new
system - that would permit end users to pay for what they should be able to
get for their money - a Big Broadband network that supplies all the voice,
video and Net access anyone could want. At the same time, the new system
would free customers from the necessity and obligation of paying to
underwrite the maintenance of the old networks that could so readily by
subsumed by the new network.
You are all experienced Washington people. You know the math is close
enough for government work and the logic is sensible enough for policy. So
of course you are saying: this can never happen.
Why not? If Republicans can run huge deficits and Democrats are budget
balancers; if Republicans are internationalist and Democrats are
isolationists; if Republicans are spending trillions on new Medicare
benefits and Democrats are voting against the law - then certainly nothing
is impossible in the new Washington.
And I know you are troubled by the notion that our current system will make
customers spend $400 billion on yesterday's networks when they could spend
much less to bring America into the forefront of the next generation
networking of the world. You are uneasy about letting the Koreans and
Chinese lead the world in the next iteration of the Internet, not because
their people are smarter but because their governments are. You don't
welcome the vision of America export jobs to Asia to help them work out the
solutions to the problems of advanced networks.
I've proved that more than adequate demand exists to pay for Big Broadband.
Yet many market and regulatory failures stand in the way of the deployment
of Big Broadband. These problems are the reasons our federal and state
governments need to act.
The first problem is that the current two-firm market for Little Broadband
encourages both telephony and cable to build Little Broadband to every
household. But that means the total expense is twice what it needs to be.
That in fact discourages both firms building even Little Broadband every
household.
The second problem stems from game theory. The Big Broadband network of
course can provide voice, video, and data. This is referred to as the
"triple play." As in baseball the side that pulls it off makes the other
side out. In other words, if any firm produces such a triple play and is
economically viable, then it might be reasonably supposed that this firm
will dominate communications, technology, and even media markets. The
question then is whether a firm that makes its living in voice and one that
makes it living in video inclined to go for the triple play. Nash
equilibriums are what lawyers like me are taught by economists to describe
the offsetting motives that produce a collective unwillingness to proceed
into fight-to-the death competition. In short, perhaps the two-firm Little
Broadband market lacks incentives for anyone to build the Big Broadband
network. In the two-firm market, then, each firm may well be very cautious
in trying for the triple play, given the fact that the price of defeat may
be elimination.
The third problem is that government is wrongly wedded to providing
broadcast over the air. Big Broadband and wi fi dispense with the
technology of transmitting stations. It's time for government to 'get it' -
in Valley parlance - and to move video to the pipe. Nick Negroponte called
it the 'great switch' more than a decade ago, and it's time to get on with it.
A fourth problem is that demand for fixed line local voice often cannot
find many different sellers: the market is not perfectly competitive.
Moreover, until very recently that demand could not obtain voice over the
Internet. Now services like Vonage and Skype are meeting the demand for
voice over the Internet, and most cable companies, as well as at least some
telephone companies, do or soon will over voice over the Internet. All the
new demand for voice over the Internet should be allowed to help pay for
Big Broadband. Instead state and federal government seems concerned to slow
this burgeoning VOIP market. What should happen is that government should
permit VOIP demand to stimulate broadband.
The fifth problem is that our existing universal service schemes subsidize
local voice for rural and poor populations. Instead they should subsidize
Big Broadband for those and all other populations that need a little
economic help in getting on-line, while getting their voice on the same
line. A policy for bringing all Americans into the experience of using a
computer on the Web can generate economic and social benefits, as well as
provide a significant stimulus to the economy. We might even see a rise in
general happiness, since surveys show that those on internet are even
statistically more likely to be happy than those off the internet.
If as many were online as those who watch satellite and cable television -
now nearly 90% of homes - many social benefits could be distributed and
many social needs served by on-line communication. Political associations
could be created more readily, thus increasing participation in democracy.
Health care and education could more efficiently be distributed to target
populations that are otherwise costly to reach, such as shut-in's, workers,
or those geographically distant from medical centers and schools.
But even if you do not agree that all should be on-line for various social
reasons, surely you agree that state and federal governments are likely to
maintain the policies that make local voice so affordable everyone buys it.
Therefore, why object if governments became wise enough to merge the
so-called universal voice policy with a universal Big Broadband policy? If
we have to spend taxpayer and consumer money to all sorts of new things -
prescription drugs and pipelines, the Iraqi coast guard and a Hooters in
Louisiana - can't we at least get a bonus of Big Broadband for the same
money we are certain to spend anyhow? That way we can still get yesterday's
services but over tomorrow's network.
Since this is Washington, it would be unusual not to elevate means over
ends, at least at the end of the talk.
At least three possible models for implementing universal Big Broadband are
worth consideration; perhaps others would emerge from the Notice of Inquiry
I'd like the FCC to issue.
First, government could grant to every consumer an assignable tax credit.
As I said, the funds could come from the voice or broadcast subsidy
programs that already exist; or if those could be eliminated, the funds
could come from the general treasury revenues that are being tapped for so
many other technology projects in the current budget. Consumers would grant
that credit to any firm that provided the requisite minimum 10 to 100
megabits per second of access. Cable, telephony, and any other entrant,
such as wireless, would compete for the credit. When a firm obtained enough
credits, it could have adequate revenue guaranteed to cover the cost of a
Big Broadband network.
The broadband provider could charge whatever the market would bear.
However, it would not obtain the credit unless it won the customer. The
credit would equal the difference between willingness to pay and cost - not
an easy calculation but one that can be made by model and then adjusted by
experience.
A second proposal would be to have state utility commissions designate a
preferred big broadband provider. This firm would be obligated to provide a
physical link of at least ten megabits per second to every household in a
designated geographic area. Any technically qualified solution would be
acceptable, so that wireless and wire-based alternatives could compete for
the state designation. The preferred broadband firm would then auction its
physical capacity to service providers.
A third proposal is for government to order all existing universal service
programs for voice to be dedicated to providing VOIP as opposed to existing
voice over circuit. As part of that, cable and telephony could, if they
chose, merge their local access networks, thus saving each of them
substantial costs. As a condition they would keep their services separate
and competitive, dividing the physical infrastructure from the provision of
service. This model resembles the exemption from the antitrust laws passed
by Congress to permit local newspapers to share printing facilities in
order to obtain economies of scale in distribution while continuing to
compete in the content business.
A final consideration is that wireless broadband access may be brought to
the market at a price and with functionality that obviates the need for a
wire-based Big Broadband network. If so, then the current HDTV plan is
monumentally foolish; the circuit voice network is under heavier siege than
we know; and VOIP still should not be lassoed into the current regulatory
regime. Instead, government should make any and all subsidies - I insist
either none or hardly any will be necessary - available both to wireless
and wire-based Big Broadband providers, and let the better network prevail.
A decade ago, John Malone, perhaps the single most important builder of the
American cable networks, predicted that three inventions-the
microprocessor, digitization, and fiber optics-would revolutionize the
media and communications industries, and drive their convergence into a
single market. He foresaw a 500-channel universe. And in late 1993, to
capture the value of this triple revolution of technology, he sought to
merge his cable company, TCI, with the phone company, Bell Atlantic. The
two together promised to build an "information highway" to at least forty
percent of all homes in the United States. This highway would carry all
voice and all video channels to each home. To support this big pipe, the
two huge companies would raise the capital necessary to build fiber
networks to homes. The merger plans collapsed in 1994.
Malone did not close his deal. He did not predict the Internet. He didn't
predict that the great content cornucopia would comprise not his ballyhooed
five hundred channels so much as the countless pages on the Web.
Yet Malone was right to identify that the access network is key to
innovation and growth in ICT. With little broadband, the access bottleneck
will be exasperating for years to come. Current microprocessors are able to
display in fractions of seconds movies or videoconferences that the fiber
can carry at the speed of light from anywhere in the world. And at the
screens of these information-hungry computers sit a hundred million people
who wait impatiently for still pictures and words to resolve themselves
slowly into recognizable form. Rather than waiting hours to download a
film, the consumer drives to Blockbuster for a rental. So we have a problem
of complementary products: no shoestrings, plenty of shoes; no access
network, plenty of services that would like to get across that network. We
have skimpy connection and plenty of computing potential that yearns for
the big broadband connection.
Many chapters of regulatory history counsel against government policies
that promote specific technologies. However, a high capacity physical link
is not so much a technology solution as a platform for innovation and a
basis for service level competition. It should be a basis for a future of
technology discovery, and the creation of a new common medium that can bind
us all together.
--30--
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