Advocates
for telecommunications deregulation work themselves into a lather when thinking
about how government regulation kills jobs and robs stakeholders of the
incentive to invest and innovate.
Sponsored researchers provide cover with selective analysis of data and its
quite bogus extrapolation. For example,
even as incumbent carriers like Verizon and AT&T spend billions on content
and future technologies, like 5G, to deliver it, the carriers and their consulting
advocates attribute regulation as severely dampening any reason to invest in
new plant.
How many commercial ventures can deliberately ruin their service with an eye toward forcing customers to upgrade to a more expensive tier? Pretty risky proposition, but wireless carriers can get away with this strategy.
Let me get
this straight. Incumbents have no reason
to keep their business alive and fresh with cutting edge technologies, because
regulators will prevent them from reaping the fruits of their labor by forcing
network sharing and imposing network neutrality requirements?
Does this
pass smell test? Why would Verizon spend
over $4 billion to buy Yahoo and its considerable inventory of content and
customer base if the carrier business was being starved of funds to increase
transmission speed and capacity?
Let’s
consider the dead weight social loss in regulation. I’ll readily admit that uncalibrated and
unwarranted government oversight can harm consumers and competition. Incumbents do not want you to know this, but
they welcome regulation that imposes a disproportionate burden on competitors
and creates barriers to market entry by prospective competitors.
Incumbents
also do not want you to know that their service contracts—and the regulated
tariffs that preceded them—impose far worse costs on consumers than anything
the FCC could impose. Regulation by
contractual fine print refers to the anticompetitive and consumer harming
language carriers sneak into their terms of service.
Here are
some examples:
Unlimited
data does not mean unmetered and boundless downloading opportunities. Fine
print in service terms, like that offered on a “take it or leave basis” by
TMobile, offer metered service and severe penalties for exceeding a cap on
so-called unlimited data service. Should
a subscriber exceed a data threshold, then the carrier downgrades network
performance to a rate incapable of transmitting most data applications.
How many commercial ventures can deliberately ruin their service with an eye toward forcing customers to upgrade to a more expensive tier? Pretty risky proposition, but wireless carriers can get away with this strategy.
Here’s
another example: AT&T and other carriers, as well as content providers,
like Yahoo, reserve the option of scanning anything you do and say online, mining
it, collating it and marketing it. For ventures like Yahoo and social network
like Facebook, subscribers accrue value in exchange for abandoning most privacy
protection. But in the case of carriers
like AT&T, the scanning and marketing of subscriber usage data does not
result in the offer of discounted service.
Just the opposite. AT&T and
other carriers floated a trial balloon of offering to eschew some customer
snooping in exchange for additional monthly compensation. Such a deal!
Customer can pay for somewhat better privacy, but the default is
abdication of virtually all privacy.
Another example
is compulsory arbitration on terms set by the carrier using a venture hard
wired to favor the carrier in light of the business it generates for the
arbitrator.
Consumers
face a non-negotiable service terms severely tilted in favor of the carrier that
writes the contract. Even a brief scan
of these agreements would show terms that reduce, regulate, limit, minimize and
dilute consumer bargaining power. Subscribers
cannot simple churn out from one carrier to another one offering better terms,
because these so-called robust competitors have nearly identical terms and
conditions.
So who’s
the regulatory beast these days?