Archive for August, 2010

That’s not the Internet

Friday, August 27th, 2010

In my last Cool Stuff, I mused about the Google Verizon proposal on Network Neutrality and its implications pricing incentives and a two-tiered Internet.  The post received quite a bit of attention in blogsfera italiano (here, here, and here).  Since posting, I have continued to think about a tiered Internet.  I conclude that managed services already exist in the market place, but it is not the Internet.

Hovey Slide

Rich Hovey's Genius Slide

I keep coming back to a slide I stole have been using with permission from Rich Hovey for about four years .  While a triple play network may appear to be a single network, it is really three sharing the same wire or fiber.  Indeed, there might be three completely separate sets of network equipment attached at either end of the line – Internet modem, cable box, and phone terminal.  The video programming component is not neutral and certain shelf-space on the network have been reserved, and prioritized for certain applications.  But, that’s not the Internet.

I also am old enough to remember dial-up to online services such Prodigy, CompuServe, and AOL. Each service provider would offer its own content, plus some backdoor way, such as gopher or email, way into the public Internet. However, those online service providers were not the “Internet”.

The Internet is an interconnected, end-to-end, packet switched network.

Insight: There is nothing inherently anticompetitive about broadband service providers marketing managed services.  There is also nothing new about it.  However, it would be false advertising to claim it is the Internet.

Taking the Roof off of the Internet

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

The recent legislative proposal on Network Neutrality proposed by Google and Verizon would “allow broadband providers to offer additional, differentiated online services, in addition to the Internet access and video services (such as Verizon’s FIOS TV) offered today.”  Some critics have argued that that the deal would create a two-tiered Internet, one upper tier for differentiated services and one lower tier for commodity packets.  The first could swallow the second, as ISPs try to up-sell their customers to higher margin products.  So, in short, the basic Internet will get crappier and the managed Internet will get more expensive and less open to competing sources of content and applications.

There is some strong precedent for this criticism since it is not a new economic phenomenon.  Emile Dupuit observed of the French rail system in 1849:

It is not because of the few thousand francs which would have to be spent to put a roof over the third-class carriage or to upholster the third-class seats that some company or other has open carriages with wooden benches … What the company is trying to do is prevent the passengers who can pay the second-class fare from traveling third class; it hits the poor, not because it wants to hurt them, but to frighten the rich … And it is again for the same reason that the companies, having proved almost cruel to the third-class passengers and mean to the second-class ones, become lavish in dealing with first-class customers. Having refused the poor what is necessary, they give the rich what is superfluous.

As I wrote in a previous Cool Stuff, I am not inherently opposed to two tiered pricing.

Stevenson's Rocket

Sometimes even an economist will spend £5 to ride in an open carriage, if it makes his kid happy.

Even in common carriage networks there has been tiering and prioritization, such as business and economy classes in rail and air transport, for example.  In traditional a telephone networks, there was tiering. Although every one got VGS (voice grade service), under the Bell System there was still business and residential classes of service.  The network was capable of certain forms of call prioritization in emergencies, calls to 911, calling out prioritization over calling in, and GETS (Government Emergency Telecommunications Service).  There was also prioritization based on first-in-time.  The telephone network was designed to handle only fraction of capacity, and on occasion, you might get an “all circuits are busy” message when your call was blocked.

More troubling than a two-tiered Internet is the in the way which the deal could misalign economic incentives.  The Google-Verizon deal could change to the way networks compensate one another for carrying traffic to their respective customers, if the content or application provider is paying for better service on the enduser’s network.  There are basically three ways networks can compensate one another: calling-party-pays; receiving-party-pays; and bill-and-keep.  Money changes hands as their names suggest.  Bill-and-keep is the way most Internet traffic is exchanged (peering).  It works well when the networks are roughly equivalent in size, traffic flows, and cost-causation.  Receiving party pays is how most cell phone networks exchange traffic in the US.  It provides pretty good economic incentives.  The problem with the Google-Verizon deal is that it could be, in effect, a calling-party-pays arrangement.  Without regulation, these arrangements provide the opportunity for carriers to shift costs to rival networks and engage in other system-gaming.  When dealing with a “termination monopoly” such as an Internet connection, traffic should be exchanged under receiving party-pays or bill-and-keep arrangements.  The termination monopoly exists anytime there is only one network which can terminate traffic to a network end point.  It is surprisingly durable.  Even when there is a healthy number of competitors in access networks (fixed or wireless), once a subscriber chooses a particular network, he forecloses all other ways for other network participants to send him traffic.  It is in the termination network’s interest to keep prices low for its subscribers and charge high costs to other networks’ subscribers. In the current case, this fact is Okay for Google because it has lots of cash.  However, its competitors and start-ups might not be able to pay for such termination.  In this way, the Google-Verizon deal could in the long run serve to limit others from the market place.

In the end, either competition or regulation has to constrain this behavior.

Insight: Google Verizon proposal is not so much a threat to network neutrality (lower case) as it is to network economics.  Part of this is the public face of a private bargaining game. Players in the value chain are using the political and regulatory process as they struggle to gain a larger share of that chain.  It is not evil, merely self-interested.  That is fine.  At some level, Google and Verizon should be lauded for working towards a compromise and to move things forward.  But, they should not get to make public policy.  That is the exclusive domain of Congress and the FCC.  The FCC should take those views into account then offer its own independent decision to impose regulation or not.  Professors Susan Crawford and Lawrence Lessig (both of whom I admire very much) get this exactly right in their Op-Ed last week.  If Google and Verizon want to offer an internet without a roof, the FCC should make sure that another company is able to offer a competing one with a roof.

Solving Network Neutrality

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Much has been said in regard to the recent Google-Verizon proposal on Network Neutrality and the collapse of talks at the FCC.  The rough consensus is that the deal would create a two-tiered Internet.

Is a two-tiered Internet a bad thing?

Honestly, I don’t know.  On one hand, it offends my basic sense of fairness.  On the other, my economics training tells me the price discrimination is a good thing (in competitive markets).  I have been thinking, writing, and speaking (in that order) on Network Neutrality for about four or five years.  My work has been published in English, Japanese, and Italian is forthcoming.  The one thing I have consistently said is that Internet subscribers, when well-informed, with real competitive options, and faced with low switching costs, will punish ISP who are not giving them what they want.  Competition is deputizes consumers to vote with their wallets.  If a two-tiered Internet is a good thing, then a competitive market will support it.

Almost all commenters agree that the cause of Network Neutrality issue is the reduction of competition in Internet access in the US.  This follows from a series of FCC decisions which basically eviscerated its local competition rules (mostly in the form of unbundling) in favor of “market solutions”.  The major proceeding which changed these rules was the Triennial Review.  In the proceeding, incumbents told the FCC that unbundled network elements (UNEs) were bad because they discouraged investment.  The competitors argued that UNEs were good because they were necessary for network competition.  I find both of those statements true and not mutually exclusive.  It is possible for a well-intentioned, well-informed regulator could split that baby down the middle, and still throw out the bath water.  In other words, regulators can create an effective unbundling regime which mitigates the disincentives to invest while still enabling competitive entry.  Indeed, nearly every other industrialized country has some form of unbundling for local competition.

What makes this difficult in the current political climate is that UNEs and TELRIC are incredibly dull.  It is much easier to get people excited about a topic like Network Neutrality than long-run incremental costs.  So, you cannot generate the political will for a return to unbundling.

Insight: There is now a unique opportunity to move beyond the Network Neutrality debate.  However, regulators should regulate, not negotiate.  The FCC should take this opportunity to revisit its unbundling rules to craft rules which can enable competition in Internet access networks while mitigating disincentives to invest.  Time to get excited about subloops!!

An MBA’s Thoughts on Taxes and Deficits

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Riddle me this.  Why is it that when the predicate contains “common sense”, the conclusion defies logic?

Recently in the United States, a number of so-called “deficit hawks” are advocating an extension of the Bush Tax Cuts while insisting that the deficit be brought down.  This makes no sense to me.

Let me present a model simple enough for me and my MBA colleagues to understand (I am not very good at math). Imagine the erstwhile Kingdom of Carteronia.  Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Carteronia is CD$ 1,000. The government levies a 30% tax on all economic activity.  (The tax is the same for all income levels and for capital gains, so we don’t have to worry about wealth transfers, incentives or industrial policies).  Thus, revenues are CD$ 300 (1000 x 0.30) and the government has a balanced budget.  Recently, our rulers have decided to reduce the tax rate by three percentage points to 27%.  In order to maintain the same level of government expenditures and not run a deficit, GDP would have to grow in one year to CD$ 1,111.11 (300 ÷ 0.27).  This is an 11.1% growth rate and has to be stimulated by the tax cut and over and above the rate of inflation.

Think an 11.1% growth rate is possible?  Well, it would be nearly 4 times the annualized growth rate of US Real GDP, which was 2.96% between 1945 and 2009.  (It was only 1.70% per capita.) (See, http://www.measuringworth.com/growth/#)  Still think this is possible?  Consider the velocity of money.  Under the tax cut, citizens have a reduced tax liability of CD$ 30. Assume that they spend every last cent in the private sector.  Then every person has to spend every last cent of their reduced tax liability as well as any additional income it might generate several times – in fact about 35 more times in the year.

Insight: I don’t like paying taxes.  No one likes paying taxes.  If you like to pay taxes, you should have your head examined. Nonetheless, we all like the benefits that taxes can buy – the common defense and the general welfare, including: police, courts, highways, national defense, etc.  What the reduce-taxes and reduce-the-deficit augment hopes to do is: 1) dispense with a liability while retaining the attendant asset and 2) achieve an objective by deliberately behaving in a way guaranteed to produce these opposite result.  To an MBA’s mind, this is illogical.