NEWS The former head of the US equivalent of Ofcom believes the UK government should subsidise the rollout of broadband. Reed Hundt, the ex-chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, has contributed to a major new study into the future of television published yesterday by the Independent Television Commission (ITC). In it, Hundt says that the true value of ubiquitous broadband networks will only be realised once they're in place - and that the private sector is unlikely to take the risk of building them without knowing how much demand there will be. While acknowledging that governments have more pressing priorities for their budgets, such as the war on terror, he said: "In many national economies it does seem that such a plan [government subsidy of broadband] is superior to a pure market-based approach to providing the physical link for communications." His reasons are twofold. First, Hundt believes that fibre connections "probably" stimulate demand for the use of fibre-based services - in other words, supply creates its own demand. But private investors are not going to be willing to pay for such networks in the absence of proof of such demand. "The conundrum perhaps can only be broken by government funding of the network's physical layer," he said. Furthermore, "The physical link to the user, the so-called 'last-mile', does appear in some geographic and demographic markets to have elements of natural monopoly such that rigorous competition is not likely to be sustained in this market for most users," he added. And he's in no doubt as to the need for such networks. "Experiments to date have demonstrated the productivity gains and social benefits of the very fast sharing among many people of vast amounts of pictures, words, numbers and sounds. "Whether the sharing is of educational information, health care, or music depends on the demographic group under examination, but it is probable that economies and societies that have this capability, like those with airlines or roads or trains, are better off than those without," he said. Last week, BT CEO Ben Verwaayen told silicon.com that government subsidy was not the way to go. He said: "Subsidies are never a good idea in the long-term. The best thing to do is use the stuff. That's a much better way to spend money than subsidies." The government and European Union are giving limited funds to the rollout of broadband in rural areas (see http://www.silicon.com/a55505), but are certainly not subsidising it to the extent Hundt believes is necessary. For more information, see http://www.itc.org.uk
Message to government: 'Subsidise broadband in rural areas'
So says the former head of the US communications regulator
Post your comment
In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.
You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your silicon.com account below
Latest Networks stories
Get silicon.com's daily newsletter
-

Enter your email to register
Featured white papers
-
Solution Brief: Optimizing Video Delivery with Blue Coat
Hosting and disseminating videos within your business offers a unique challenge to organizations with limitations in...
-
How to prime your WLAN for employee devices
The modern smart device has had a transformative effect on the enterprise. One result of this transformation of...
-
12 tips for better video conferencing
Travel is expensive in terms of both money and time. Interestingly, however, when 1,188 video conferencing users...
Popular Networks stories
Keep in touch with silicon.com
-
Connect with silicon.com on Facebook
Discuss the news of the day with the silicon.com team
-
Follow silicon.com on Twitter
Get regular updates from the silicon.com editors
-
Join the silicon.com LinkedIn networking group
Network with your peers and share expertise
Latest jobs
-
Architect Java, J2EE, Oracle, Spring London £55-65K
Java, J2EE, Oracle, PL/SQL, SQL, Spring, Struts, Maven, Swing Java, J2EE, Oracle My client a premiere...
-
Business Analyst ( ISEB, CBAP, BA, Analyst)
Business Analyst ( ISEB, CBAP, BA, Analyst) £31,000-£42,000 + excellent benefits We take the best Business...
-
Head of Financial Accounts
A large and forward thinking NHS organisation at the forefront of the NHS change agenda currently seeks an Interim...
silicon.com newsletters
-
Stay up to date with silicon.com newsletters
Keep up with the latest news and analysis from silicon.com with our free email newsletters




