The Republican Business Model Strikes Again

Cypress

Well-known member
Getting crushed on broadband, and healthcare by those wine sipping Frogs, totally sucks.

Pathetic. This is really supposed to be news...for the better? If you listened to Republicans talk you would think they actually liked the free market but if you believed them, you would be sadly mistaken:

Qwest Communications International Inc. on Thursday introduced DSL plans with faster download speeds, including one that is the fastest DSL service from a major U.S. phone company.

Qwest is charging $104.99 per month for a download speed of 20 megabits per second. For 12 mbps, it is charging $51.99 per month. The prices are $5 lower when combined with local phone service.

Compare this "great" offer to what I just signed in France, which we all know hates choice and hates the free market, according to the GOP. For 53 euros (84 bucks) per month I receive a 100 mbps internet connection plus phone calls throughout Europe and North America plus TV channels. In local terms for local buyers one euro is one dollar but even with the terrible exchange rate this is a steal compared to the business friendly market in the US. The Republicans only care about giving business everything they want, always at the expense of consumers. It's hard to believe the GOP could do so much damage to the previously competitive US market.

The French Connection:

The numbers are startling. As recently as 2001, the percentage of the population with high-speed access in Japan and Germany was only half that in the United States. In France it was less than a quarter. By the end of 2006, however, all three countries had more broadband subscribers per 100 people than we did.

Even more striking is the fact that our “high speed” connections are painfully slow by other countries’ standards. According to the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, French broadband connections are, on average, more than three times as fast as ours. Japanese connections are a dozen times faster. Oh, and access is much cheaper in both countries than it is here.

As a result, we’re lagging in new applications of the Internet that depend on high speed. France leads the world in the number of subscribers to Internet TV; the United States isn’t even in the top 10.

What happened to America’s Internet lead? Bad policy. Specifically, the United States made the same mistake in Internet policy that California made in energy policy: it forgot — or was persuaded by special interests to ignore — the reality that sometimes you can’t have effective market competition without effective regulation.

You see, the world may look flat once you’re in cyberspace — but to get there you need to go through a narrow passageway, down your phone line or down your TV cable. And if the companies controlling these passageways can behave like the robber barons of yore, levying whatever tolls they like on those who pass by, commerce suffers.

America’s Internet flourished in the dial-up era because federal regulators didn’t let that happen — they forced local phone companies to act as common carriers, allowing competing service providers to use their lines. Clinton administration officials, including Al Gore and Reed Hundt, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, tried to ensure that this open competition would continue — but the telecommunications giants sabotaged their efforts, while The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page ridiculed them as people with the minds of French bureaucrats.

And when the Bush administration put Michael Powell in charge of the F.C.C., the digital robber barons were basically set free to do whatever they liked. As a result, there’s little competition in U.S. broadband — if you’re lucky, you have a choice between the services offered by the local cable monopoly and the local phone monopoly. The price is high and the service is poor, but there’s nowhere else to go.

Meanwhile, as a recent article in Business Week explains, the real French bureaucrats used judicious regulation to promote competition. As a result, French consumers get to choose from a variety of service providers who offer reasonably priced Internet access that’s much faster than anything I can get, and comes with free voice calls, TV and Wi-Fi.

It’s too early to say how much harm the broadband lag will do to the U.S. economy as a whole. But it’s interesting to learn that health care isn’t the only area in which the French, who can take a pragmatic approach because they aren’t prisoners of free-market ideology, simply do things better.

Paul Krugman
http://welcome-to-pottersville.blogspot.com/2007/07/paul-krugman-french-connections.html

americablog.com
 
I know it's terrible in America. Comcast has a lower customer satisfaction rating than the IRS - great job the market did there without those nozy government beaurocrats. I have one choice whenever it comes to internet. Bellsouth DSL. 35 dollars a month for a connection that rarely gets over 70-100 kilobytes per a second. And get this - the cable and DSL companies are thinking about charging customers per the gigabyte. THis after they've mastered traffic shaping techniques to reduce bandwidth consumption massively. Americans are getting it up the ass and loving it. I didn't know they were so kinky.
 
I would be curious to see Damo or someone else more up to speed on technology answer this question.... but for others feel free to chime in....

Is it possible it might just have something to do with the fact that France is the size of Texas? With a more highly concentrated population?

I would think it is harder the larger the size of the country. Anyone have any feedback on that theory?
 
It is mostly about the infrastructure type in the US. We are a bit behind, largely because of how spread out the nation is on some of the cooler wireless tech, and each of the companies has to put out their own networks across the service areas, which just increases the cost.
 
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