March 12, 2009, 4:00 am

The Broadband Gap: Why Do They Have More Fiber?
By Saul Hansell
NY Times

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/12/the-broadband-gap-why-do-they-have-more-fiber/?pagemode=print


This is the third in a series looking at the lessons for the United 
States from broadband deployment in other countries.

In the paradises of broadband — Japan, South Korea and Sweden — nearly 
everyone can surf far faster and far cheaper than anyone in the United 
States. What is their secret sauce and how can we get some?

The short answer is that broadband deployment in those countries was 
spurred by a combination of heavy government involvement, subsidies and 
lower corporate profits that may be tough for the economic and political 
system in the United States to accept. Those countries have also tried 
to encourage demand for broadband by paying schools, hospitals and other 
institutions to use high-speed Internet services.

Sweden has built one of the fastest and most widely deployed broadband 
networks in Europe because its government granted tax breaks for 
infrastructure investments, directly subsidized rural deployment, and, 
perhaps most significantly, required state-owned municipal utilities to 
create local backbone networks, reducing the cost for the local 
telephone company to provide service.

Japan let telecommunications companies write down about one-third of 
their investment in broadband the first year, rather than the usual 
policy, which requires them to spread the deductions over 22 years. The 
Japanese government also subsidized low-cost loans for broadband 
construction and paid for part of the wiring of rural areas.

“The return to fiber takes time,” said Dave Burstein, the editor of the 
DSL Prime newsletter, in an e-mail message. “Governments can invest 
thinking 10 and 20 years, but few companies can. So putting the 
expensive part (ditch-digging) under the government in some form has 
good logic. Then you have the companies compete at an upper layer where 
the investment required is not so intimidating.”

In many countries, especially in Asia, government assistance has gone 
hand in hand with an expectation that private companies will accept 
lower profit margins in order to assist in achieving the national 
broadband goals.

“The South Korean government expects its private companies to drive the 
investment in broadband infrastructure with government support in the 
form of loans and tax subsidies as their incentive,” wrote the 
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation in a report last year.

There are only a handful of major projects worldwide to build fiber 
lines to homes that don’t involve significant government aid of some 
sort, Mr. Burstein said, including Verizon’s FiOS and Iliad’s fiber 
network in some large French cities.

Don’t count out “national pride” as a partial explanation for the 
creation of high-speed networks in Asia, Mr. Burstein wrote me:

Japan then got serious about fiber because they couldn’t accept Korea 
being ahead, and similarly in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, and now 
Malaysia. Singapore wants to pull ahead again, so they decided to go to 
1 gigabit (shared) fiber with really intense regulation.

What lessons are there in all this for the United States, which 
historically has had an aversion to Asian-style industrial policy?

Finding a way to bring broadband to remote and rural locations where it 
is simply uneconomic for commercial companies to string wires is one 
clear option. Much of the $7 billion for broadband in the stimulus bill 
is allocated to this, but more will likely be needed to get the sort of 
universal coverage that Sweden and some other countries have.

The government also could help the people who don’t use the Internet 
because they don’t have the skills or even have a computer. The stimulus 
bill has some money for this. There are also some proposals to redirect 
some of the Universal Service Fund money now used to pay the operating 
costs of rural phone companies to rural broadband providers.

And of course if regulators can find a way to increase competition and 
lower the price of broadband, more people would no doubt sign up. 
Studies have shown that people in the United States with incomes under 
$50,000 are far less likely to have broadband service than those who 
earn more. Some argue that devoting more spectrum to wireless data 
services may also create more competition, but there is quite a debate 
about whether wireless service can match the speed and cost of cable or 
fiber.

But the biggest question is whether the country needs to actually 
provide subsidies or tax breaks to the telephone and cable companies to 
increase the speeds of their existing broadband service, other than in 
rural areas. Many people served by Verizon and Comcast are likely to 
have the option to get super-fast service very soon. But people whose 
cable and phone companies are in more financial trouble, such as Qwest 
Communications and Charter Communications, may well be in the slow lane 
to fast surfing. Still, it’s a good bet that all the cable companies 
will eventually get around to upgrading to the faster Docsis 3 standard 
and the phone companies will be forced to upgrade their networks to compete.

The lesson from the rest of the world is that if the Obama 
administration really wants to bring very-high-speed Internet access to 
most people faster than the leisurely pace of the market, it will most 
likely have to bring out the taxpayers’ checkbook.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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