| Telecom Policy is Stuck in the 20th Century |
|
|
| By Timothy B. Lee |
| Tuesday, December 13, 2005 |
|
The video marketplace is changing so fast that it's gotten hard to keep track of it all. In October, Apple Computer unveiled a new iPod that allows users to purchase popular television shows like Lost and Desperate Housewives for $1.99 an episode and watch them on the go. By the end of the month, the company had sold a million episodes over the Internet. Then in November, Yahoo! and TiVo announced an agreement to deliver Yahoo! content via the Internet to TiVo set-top boxes. Not to be outdone, AOL and Warner Brothers announced a new service called In2TV, which will allow consumers to watch older TV shows for free over the Internet. But while every month brings new developments in the video marketplace, the telecommunications laws that govern it are stuck in the 20th Century. Missouri state law gives local governments the power to decide which companies may do business in their jurisdictions, and in many cases city governments have created soviet-style five-year plans in which only one company is permitted to offer video services. Those "franchise" requirements harm consumers by raising the cost of entry for new companies wishing to offer video services, leading to fewer choices and higher prices.Cable TV franchising was originally created on the assumption that pay television service is a "natural monopoly." Policymakers worried that without municipal oversight, such monopolies would gouge consumers and fail to provide responsive service. But whatever merit that argument might have had in the early days of the cable television industry, it has no basis in reality today. Virtually all Missouri households enjoy vigorous competition between cable and satellite television. And more competition is on the way. Phone companies like AT&T (formerly SBC) and Verizon have announced plans to build new fiber-optic networks to millions of households nationwide and use them to deliver video, voice, and data services. Ironically, the franchising rules themselves have become a serious obstacle to competition. A company wishing to offer video services across the state of Missouri is required to negotiate hundreds of local franchise agreements with cities and counties across the state. It's a time-consuming, burdensome process that is likely to delay the deployment of new services by several years. |
| Tweet |