[1st-mile-nm] Broadband to go free in 2 yrs in all of India toeveryone
Carroll Cagle
carroll at cagleandassociates.com
Mon Apr 30 08:39:48 PDT 2007
I had been thinking about responding to Dewayne's post about the India
broadband experimentation, but am glad that Andrew went first. I understand
Dewayne's interest, I believe, and think that many people in the U.S. are so
unhappy with the present model that almost anything seems better.
My observation covers less ground that Andrew Cohill's thoughtful analysis.
My thought, when I first read the India report, was that, "nothing is free."
If the government provides supposedly "free" bandwidth, someone ultimately
is paying -- i.e., taxpayers.
Having said that, it could be that a thoughtful case could be made that
infrastructure should be a public venue, paid for by taxpayers -- probably
not through sales or income taxes but via issuance of general obligation
bonds. The UTOPIA model in Utah uses a variation on this theme, using
instead of G.O. bonds, "revenue bonds" issued by the cities and backed by
them but with the bonds being retired over a period of time by a percentage
of the service fees.
A legitimate concern with any public broadband venture is that government
might not be a knowledgeable-enough, and service-oriented-enough, operator,
in which case a public-private partnership is another variation to consider
(public -- i.e., government -- ownership with operator being
technology-savvy private company, under contract).
Carroll Cagle
-----Original Message-----
From: 1st-mile-nm-bounces+carroll=cagleandassociates.com at mailman.dcn.org
[mailto:1st-mile-nm-bounces+carroll=cagleandassociates.com at mailman.dcn.org]
On Behalf Of Andrew Cohill
Sent: Monday, April 30, 2007 8:51 AM
To: 1st-mile-nm at crank.dcn.davis.ca.us
Subject: Re: [1st-mile-nm] Broadband to go free in 2 yrs in all of India
toeveryone
On Apr 28, 2007, at 12:27 PM, Dewayne Hendricks wrote:
> [Note: It looks like exciting things are in store for India as far
> as broadband is concerned. So where is this kind of bold thinking
> here in the U.S.? DLH]
>
It is not at all clear that "free broadband" is sustainable. The
longstanding problems with free services (in any market, not just
broadband) include market distortion and low quality service.
Market distortion occurs because "free" services suggest to users of
the service that supply is inexhaustible, and so users use as much as
possible. Not everyone thinks this way, but a small number of users
who hog bandwidth can consume all available supply.
This leads to low quality of service, in part because there is no
pricing feedback to users (see above), and in part because the lack
of revenue makes it difficult to expand capacity as demand increases.
In fact, fees alone do not guarantee a sustainable business model.
In the U.S. and most other markets, the current broadband business
model is upside down. Service providers enjoy maximized profits when
customers, paying a fixed fee for Internet access, don't use the
service at all. Service providers make the least profit if customers
like the service and use it a lot.
From an economic perspective, charging a fixed fee no matter how
much bandwidth a customers uses is exactly the same as giving the
service away for free. Neither one provides the funds necessary to
expand capacity, increase service areas, pay for proper maintenance
and upkeep, and add new services.
A solution is to move to a service oriented architecture (a different
network architecture AND a different business model) that conveys a
clearer relationship between supply and demand to customers.
Customers pay for services, rather than buying a bucket of
bandwidth. Service fees are based on the real cost of providing the
service, thus providing information to customers about supply and
demand. This can be done easily with both wired and wireless networks.
Andrew
-------------------------------------------------
Andrew Michael Cohill, Ph.D.
President
Design Nine, Inc.
Design Nine provides visionary broadband architecture and engineering
services, telecommunications and broadband master planning, and
broadband project management.
Visit the Technology Futures blog for frequently updated news and
commentary on technology issues.
http://www.designnine.com/news/
http://www.designnine.com/
Blacksburg, Virginia
540.951.4400
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