Why Is Broadband More Expensive In the US Than Elsewhere? 569
mrspoonsi writes "The BBC reports "Home broadband in the US costs far more than elsewhere. At high speeds, it costs nearly three times as much as in the UK and France, and more than five times as much as in South Korea. Why?...'Americans pay so much because they don't have a choice,' says Susan Crawford, a former special assistant to President Barack Obama on science, technology and innovation policy. We deregulated high-speed internet access 10 years ago and since then we've seen enormous consolidation and monopolies, so left to their own devices, companies that supply internet access will charge high prices, because they face neither competition nor oversight."
Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
The telco lobby writes the legislation.
Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:5, Insightful)
America is the home of capitalism, which means competition, which drives down prices and raises standards. The rest of the world is a socialist hellhole.
It's similar to what the North Koreans believe, with a touch of stockholm syndrome.
Deregulated = Monopolies? (Score:5, Insightful)
It is always cheaper... (Score:2, Insightful)
to buy a congressman than to build a better business. To all those you think America is a free market, go fuck you ignorant self then read up on Mussolini's definition of fascism.
No real choice (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is this? I would guess that it's probably due to monopolies taking advantage of regulations to make competition stay away. Also probably in part to people wanting to watch specific sports and shows, and only being able to get them though one of the major cable/satellite networks. Shows like that are going to be hard for a startup internet company to replicate. Things like piracy, netflix, and itunes alleviates some of these problems, but a lot of people still prefer to get their games live.
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:5, Insightful)
Precisely this. The illusion of "choice" and "capitalism" is strong in the USA.
Then you get down to the nitty gritty.
In the town I live in, precious few grocery stores aren't the HEB brand. There is no real competition for them and they gouge.
In the neighborhood I life in, I can't get FiOS and the AT&T DSL options are a joke (they won't bother putting in capacity). So if you want anything but *shudder* dialup, your options are Warner, Warner, or... Warner. Zero competition, price gouging accordingly.
The communications market is so "deregulated" that monopolism takes over, with deliberate barriers to entry placed by noncompete agreements and dirty tactics. And yet so many people think anarcho-libertarian, "laissez faire" deregulation will somehow make their lives better in every aspect.
Re:Not really news... (Score:5, Insightful)
There is no oversight in clothing market and yet you can buy a shirt at Wallmart or Ross for $5 or shoes for $10. Why don't they charge $100 for a shirt and keep the difference? It is not government oversight that drives prices down but competition. Telcos are not a good case study of either free market or regulation as they are a special case in a lot of ways.
Hmmm .... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, the conclusion is de-regulation is bad for consumers, but good for businesses.
Gee, I'm shocked. De-regulation basically is carte blanche to screw over your customers and not be accountable to anybody.
The whole mentality of "it's good as long someone is making profit" will be the death of us.
The 'free market' is a lie, and it always has been. Consumers don't have perfect information, and corporations will lie cheat and steal to improve their bottom line.
That de-regulation would ever improve anything for consumers has always been a big lie.
Re:Deregulated = Monopolies? (Score:5, Insightful)
Your local utility is only a monopoly as long as your local government makes them one
The problem in the USA is that pressure groups, whether industrial or commercial have no counterbalance. The wrong sort of regulation stunts growth and competition. However zero regulation turns a free market into survival of the fittest with that survivor killing off the rest. Neither situation is good and a regulator who is able to stop consolidation and monopolies would act in the interests of the consumers.
That's what happens in most countries and it's what keeps a competitive market operating. The USA has allowed its corporations to become too influential and too powerful.
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not true at all. Try opening up a new cable company in your local town, or opening up a new power plant and running new wires to all the houses. Oh, that's right, you can't, because the government has decided that it would be inefficient to have more than one set of power lines, or water lines, or cable lines, or telephone lines, etc, going into a single home. So they allow one provider to service the whole town and be a government sanctioned monopoly. That's hardly "deregulation"... in fact, it's the epitome of the government regulating and controlling everything.
Re:That's overly simplistic - population density k (Score:4, Insightful)
The picture you paint of Europe is a little simplistic too. France has a few large cities, but the tenth-biggest one has less than half a million inhabitants. It has tens of thousands of villages with 1000 or less inhabitants. And you get a choice of cheap ADSL provider in most of those small villages.
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:5, Insightful)
Horrendously wrong.
Capitalism is a game in which the goal is simply to make the most money (with the least effort). The "free market" (aka competition) is just one of many possible strategies to make the most money. Competing in the free market however, is without question the most expensive, the riskiest, and the least rewarding possible strategy available to most business...which is precisely why practically every business on earth bends over backwards to avoid the free market at all costs.
Going into "new markets", forming monopolies, getting regulations passed to raise the barriers to entry, avoiding "mature markets", etc are all entirely about avoiding the free market and thus avoiding competition.
This is the biggest mental issue free market advocates face: The ironic reality that if you want an actual free market...you must drag people into it kicking and screaming (most effectively through tight regulation...).
Re:Ease of Access (Score:4, Insightful)
When all of the internet is being filtered through five or six main providers, it is easier for the NSA to funnel all of the information into its data analysis machines. Can you image the headaches the NSA would have if all the little mom and pop companies (if they were still around to do internet), would not provide for a free backdoor to the operations...
Not really. All they have to do is put their taps on the backbone servers. Since everything is routed through them, they see everything.
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:5, Insightful)
Its more a matter of practicality than regulation.
Nobody would stand for yet another cable company trenching through every neighborhood laying new wire or fiber. Even if they wanted to, they couldn't afford it. The only way this gets done is when the neighborhood is built, and there is nothing to disrupt, and not sidewalks or driveways are laid yet. You can trench, pipe, and pedestal a hundred home subdivision in an afternoon and leave it to the home builder to cable each house to the pedestal. Comcast or Verizon will jump at the chance to do that because it means a lot of customers are locked in.
When you build a subdivision, you typically deed the streets, waterlines, sewers, to the city/county at the end of construction.
Its long past time to stop subcontracting the bandwidth job to the Telco/Cable companies and make the subdivision contractor put that in
and deed that to the city as well. Yes it raises home prices.
Re:Not really news... (Score:5, Insightful)
In a truly deregulated market, cable companies would split the markets to maximise profits.
FTFY.
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Deregulated = Monopolies? (Score:5, Insightful)
Horseshit.
In the real world there's always more large corporations willing to try to get the regulators to set up special deals for them.
In the real world, if you didn't have regulation, you would still be having babies die of being poisoned by melamine laced formula from China.
As long as there's an advantage to be had and profit to be made, there's always going to be things companies will do to maximize their profits which directly harms other people. If there's no regulation, there's no consequences.
The market as so often gets pitched to us is incapable of solving these problems.
Without regulation, Enron and other fraudulent things would happen all the time and your economy would be even more of a Ponzi scheme than it is now. Without regulation, your environment would be so polluted as to be unlivable. It really would be survival of the least scrupulous and with the most money, and everyone else would be fucked.
Maybe in your capitalist fantasy land all of these would be self correcting problems. The problem is it would take decades, kill loads of people, and destroy most of your society along the way. And it likely still wouldn't do half of what people claim it would.
Pure laissez faire capitalism is as much of a unicorn as the socialist workers paradise is. The problem nobody seems to like to acknowledge is pure capitalism will fuck you just as deeply as pure socialism -- only in entirely different ways.
Neither system can actually exist in the extreme forms people like to advocate. Taken to their extremes, they're both full of shit.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
The telco lobby writes the legislation.
Nope, but you're half-way there. The problem with the United States is that, well... States. In most other countries, if you want to run cable, utilities, etc., you go to the federal government, get your permit, do whatever environmental impact studies need done, and be on your merry. But here, you have to deal with municipalities. Thousands of them. And that opens the door for exclusive contracts; Which are typically for 10, 20, even 50 years. And it goes to one company. One. For an entire town. For 50 years. They didn't write any legislation, they just took advantage of how our government was organized. It's a glitch courtesy of our Constitution.
The other half of the equation though, and one most people forget, is that the United States is big. Like, really big. Like, it could fit all those other countries mentioned inside it and still have space left over for dessert. Low population density is what fucks us, even more than the above-mentioned which, while bad, can be fixed by law. You cannot shrink a landmass down to a more maintainable size.
Roads, water works, electricity, cabling... all of it, we need more. A lot more than say, Japan would. In Japan, people are packed in like sardines. There are parts of this country where you can watch your dog run away for three days it's so flat and barren. But it still needs cabling run across it.
We are, in a very literal sense, a victim of our own size. No fat american jokes though please.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
We like our internet service like we like our medical service.
Way overpriced do to large companies owning congress.
Re:Probably Obama. Or the Tea Party. (Score:4, Insightful)
America is the home of capitalism, which means competition, which drives down prices and raises standards.
Competition. Right. My choices for internet are 50 mbps Comcast (which has to be bundled with cable service I don't use) or 1.5 mbps DSL. Seems there's lots of competition here.
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is Broadband more expensive?
Why do we pay more for healthcare?
Why is our productivity so high compared to real wages?
Why does our government spy on us and disregard our civil liberties?
Why are we below the average in ability according to OECD?
Why is the gap between the richest and the poorest on par with that of African countries?
And finally, why the fuck do people keep telling me this is the greatest country on Earth?
I want to be proud for my country and what it stood for, but it's hard to see nowadays.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
Low population density is what fucks us, even more than the above-mentioned which, while bad, can be fixed by law. You cannot shrink a landmass down to a more maintainable size.
This is a horse shit excuse and I'm tired of hearing it. Why doesn't the Northeast megalopolis have cheap internet? It has a population density of 360 people/sq km
How about all of the 'mega regions' of the US? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megaregions_of_the_United_States [wikipedia.org]
Why don't the east and west coasts have high speed rail, good cheap internet, etc.
South Korea is on a peninsula with a country stuck in the 70s to the north. Yet they have great internet. Their population density isn't that much greater than the North East megalopolis and much closer than say Sweden, Norway, Finland. All of which also have great internet. Denmark density is a 1/3 of the north east and I was still getting 1 Gbps in my hotel.
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Will McAvoy: [Looks at Jenny] And, yeah, you... sorority girl. Just in case you accidentally wander into a voting booth one day, there are some things you should know. One of them is: There is absolutely no evidence to support the statement that we're the greatest country in the world. We're 7th in literacy, 27th in math, 22nd in science, 49th in life expectancy, 178th in infant mortality, 3rd in median household income, number 4 in labor force and number 4 in exports. We lead the world in only three categories: number of incarcerated citizens per capita, number of adults who believe angels are real and defense spending - where we spend more than the next 26 countries combined, 25 of whom are allies. Now, none of this is the fault of a 20-year-old college student, but you, nonetheless, are without a doubt a member of the worst period generation period ever period, so when you ask what makes us the greatest country in the world, I don't know what the FUCK you're talking about!... Yosemite?
[Stunned silence]
Re:That's overly simplistic - population density k (Score:2, Insightful)
I am French and I currently live in Arizona, and your logic seems a little bit bad because YOU DON'T NEED TO PUT CABLE/FIBER TO EVERY METER SQUARE IN UNINHABITED LAND. You just don't need to have fiber to every stone in Grand Canyon or Monument Valley but you DO NEED TO HAVE IT in Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, etc.
The population is clustered in such a way that it is easy to connect them.
Yet :
For 20Mbps here (in the center of a 500K inhabitants city) : 56$/mo (that's without TV or phone).
For 25Mbps in France (in the center of 20 houses village, 3Km away from a 8K inhabitants city) : 49.71$/mo (which also includes free and unlimited calls to more than 100 countries and cheap mobile phone plans (2hrs voice, unlimited text)).
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
Except you can't blame municipalities for the cost when they're pretty much the only part of government that's been trying to provide low-cost access. Many municipal governments have tried to set up as ISPs for their citizens, and the costs are typically far lower than what you see from the cable/DSL duopoly. They've been lobbied and sued and otherwise lawyered to death for the effort, but at least they're trying.
And while you can't fix size, you don't really need to. Most of the long-distance fiber backbones have already been run, and most of the US population lives in urban or suburban areas. The bulk of the land area of the US is rural, and they may not get cheap broadband anytime soon (it literally took an act of Congress to get them electricity and telephone after all), but they're a pretty small minority.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
How come the invisible hand of the market doesn't spank the telcos for their impudence?
Three words: Right Of Way.
Most cities/towns don't want to have their streets clogged up with wiring, so they limit what they lease out for rights to put in wire/cable/fiber, or worse, auction it off. Thus the number of competitors is pretty limited. This in turn creates a nasty little duopoly/triopoly in most areas, with one provider on cable (Comcast/Time-Warner/Charter), one on DSL (CenturyLink/Frontier), and maybe one for fiber if your locale is lucky enough to have it. Some areas also have wireless broadband as well, but nowadays that's as rare as fiber.
Either way, the result is a "stable" market of regular price hikes where the consumer has no incentive to switch... I've only seen one exception, when Charter moved into the rural Oregon coastal area where I lived - I saw my broadband cost go down from CenturyStink's $70/mo for 3mb/sec, to Charter's $30/mo for 30mb/sec (which I suspect will remain that way until Charter takes over enough of the region.)
Given the lower population density overall for the US (but not average, mind), the initial cost for competition coupled with reluctance from town/city/county officials to grant right-of-way (or worse, watching them action off or sell right-of-way for astoundingly high prices), means you the consumer are, well, screwed.
Throw into the mix is the intensive and money-rich lobbying efforts by existing telcos to prohibit any worthwhile competition or muni-owned infrastructure, and you have a shit situation overall, no?.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the state interferes by granting monopolies over land rights for cabling and radio spectrum.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
No one questions that its more costly to supply infrastructure to rural areas. The question is why that excuse is at all relevant to American cities. My connectivity, in an urban area in a technological center of the country, is piss poor and extraordinarily expensive because Comcast has an effective monopoly.
In addition to their price setting ability, Comcast has no incentive to systematically increase network capacity. Instead, they use incremental upgrades made in the course of necessary maintenance to provide new introductory offers while locking in existing customers at lower and more expensive tiers. I tried to find out recently if I could upgrade to a higher service tier - and the answer was no. Even though I'm on the lowest tier (15 Mbps @ $50/mo) and am an existing customer, they will only "offer" me new subscriber packages for which I am not eligible.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:2, Insightful)
When it is packed, they complain about having to dug up the road, concrete and existing buildings.
When it is too rural, the complain that the density just isn't there to offer service.
They only want to lay down fibre when it is new development and rich areas (i.e suburbs) where people can afford their itoys.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)
Girlintraining almost has it right. While we are not socialistic and have a government being a good big brother to us, we are pseudo-Capitalistic with the worst part of both Socialism and Capitalism in force. If we had a REALLY free economy, the problem would be solved quite quickly. The problem is, we don't have a friggin clue how to solve the problem infrastructure.
Infrastructure that depends on right of way to land creates a natural monopoly. I don't feel going laisse faire would accomplish anything. If you remove government control and hand over access to private citizens, you will amplify the problem a thousand-fold; Everyone between point A and point B will want a cut, and not everyone will be willing to offer access at a reasonable rate. This is why you have easements and eminent domain. Our current system places right of way in the hands of municipalities, which often offer exclusive contracts and can also be bullied or bought off in ways that the state or federal authorities cannot.
You cannot have a 'free' economy when you're dealing with a natural monopoly. Even Adam Smith in Wealth of Nations said as much about land ownership. It must be owned or controlled by the government, or you get situations exactly like this; Profits increase because the fixed costs remain constant but demand is ever-increasing. Telecommunications is the classic case of a natural monopoly. You would be hard pressed to find a better example!
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
If America stopped exporting food, so many countries could finally get domestic food supply on financially viable track and get self-reliant and people in those countries would get up economically out of poverty and hunger. Agriculture is the first industry of any country and we are denying them to opportunity to build it, basically keeping them in the stone age.
On top of that people in US starve, while US exports food. How can you put that together other than the US Food Aid being basically a money giveaway to the local agriculture industry. You need to read some more on this "achievement" you mention. It is the one policy that basically decimates central america and africa and keeps them from developing. It is almost as bad as the fact that since they are now fully reliant on the food aid, we dictate policiies like no condoms in a continent fighting the worst AIDS epidemic.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2012/jul/18/us-multinationals-control-food-aid [theguardian.com]
Make sure to get your flag ready.
Re:Telco oligopoly (Score:2, Insightful)