Recently
anti-network neutrality researchers and advocates have made an assertion that
does not make sense to me. First, they
claim incumbent carriers have substantially curbed capital expenditures in
plant. Then they attribute the decline
as largely resulting from the FCC’s Open Internet Order.
So if you don’t care to rely on my unsponsored perspective on the matter of whether incumbents suddenly have stopped investing in the future consider this from a clearly right of center source, the Financial Times:
“AT&T is a big spender, investing more in infrastructure in the first half of this year than any other corporation in the US. Over the past five years it has ploughed nearly $140bn into its network, and it plans to spend a further $21bn this year and more still in 2016.
“‘I fundamentally believe if you are not a number one or two investor in this industry, you get left behind,’ Mr Stephenson recently told analysts.’” See David Crow, Telecoms: Showtime for AT&T, FINANCIAL TIMES (October 15, 2015); available at: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/70c15980-7321-11e5-a129-3fcc4f641d98.html#axzz3p1qj8qH3.
Such work would
not pass muster under peer review, nor does it pass an informal “smell test.”
On the latter screen, why would both AT&T and Verizon make multi-billion
dollar investments in legacy content distribution (DirecTV) and content (AOL)
if they did not think they could use access to a far larger set of consumers as
a way to provide more service bundles?
Put more simply: why would a legacy carrier skimp on its infrastructure after
having paid handsomely for content that needs distribution to consumers?
AT&T
touts the DirecTV acquisition as making it possible to offer a “quad-play” bundle
of video, wired broadband, wireless broadband and voice; see: http://www.att.com/gen/general?pid=18235#fbid=jUSgILGxbqx.
Verizon sees AOL as providing a way to diversify into content and improve its web
advertising service skills.
Even as
certain stakeholder want regulators, legislators and judges to think an open
Internet would shut the investment tap, they also want to tout how much more
plant investment we have vis a vis other nations and regions. Who needs a universal service subsidy
mechanism when we lead the world in 4G and fiber deployment? Recently Verizon announced an expedited
schedule for 5G research and development. See http://www.fiercewireless.com/tech/story/verizon-test-5g-2016/2015-09-08.
As a
professor, I have the luxury of time to review everything I possibly can. I make an effort to maintain an open mind on
each and every subject. I pay a high
premium for not having “cast my lot” with one or the other camp and for having
an independent (if unreliable) point of view.So if you don’t care to rely on my unsponsored perspective on the matter of whether incumbents suddenly have stopped investing in the future consider this from a clearly right of center source, the Financial Times:
“AT&T is a big spender, investing more in infrastructure in the first half of this year than any other corporation in the US. Over the past five years it has ploughed nearly $140bn into its network, and it plans to spend a further $21bn this year and more still in 2016.
“‘I fundamentally believe if you are not a number one or two investor in this industry, you get left behind,’ Mr Stephenson recently told analysts.’” See David Crow, Telecoms: Showtime for AT&T, FINANCIAL TIMES (October 15, 2015); available at: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/70c15980-7321-11e5-a129-3fcc4f641d98.html#axzz3p1qj8qH3.