The country that literally invented the internet is now behind Estonia in terms of download speeds

There's not a lot of competition for those cables.
(Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
A
ccording to a recent study by Ookla Speedtest,
the U.S. ranks a shocking 31st in the world in terms of average
download speeds. The leaders in the world are Hong Kong at 72.49 Mbps
and Singapore on 58.84 Mbps. And America? Averaging speeds of 20.77
Mbps, it falls behind countries like Estonia, Hungary, Slovakia, and
Uruguay.
Its upload speeds are even worse.
Globally, the U.S. ranks 42nd with an average upload speed of 6.31 Mbps,
behind Lesotho, Belarus, Slovenia, and other countries you only hear
mentioned on Jeopardy.
So how did America fall behind? How did the country that literally invented the internet — and
the home to world-leading tech companies such as Apple, Microsoft,
Netflix, Facebook, Google, and Cisco — fall behind so many others in
download speeds?
Susan Crawford argues
that "huge telecommunication companies"
such as Comcast, Time Warner,
Verizon, and AT&T have "divided up markets and put themselves in a
position where they're subject to no competition."
How? The 1996 Telecommunications Act — which was meant to foster competition
— allowed cable companies and telecoms companies to simply divide
markets and merge their way to monopoly, allowing them to charge
customers higher and higher prices without the kind of investment in
internet infrastructure, especially in next-generation fiber optic
connections, that is ongoing in other countries. Fiber optic connections
offer a particularly compelling example. While expensive to build, they
offer faster and smoother connections than traditional copper wire
connections. But Verizon stopped building out fiber optic infrastructure in 2010 — citing high costs — just as other countries were getting to work.
Crawford told the BBC:
We
deregulated high-speed internet access 10 years ago and since then we've
seen enormous consolidation and monopolies… Left to their own devices,
companies that supply internet access will charge high prices, because
they face neither competition nor oversight. [BBC]
If a market becomes a monopoly, there's
often nothing whatever to force monopolists to invest in infrastructure
or improve their service. Of course, in the few places
where a new competitor like Google Fiber has appeared, telecoms
companies have been spooked and forced to cut prices and improve service
in response to the new competition. But that isn't happening
everywhere. It's very expensive for a new competitor to come into a
market, like telecommunications, that has very high barriers to entry.
Laying copper wire or fiber optic cable is expensive, and if the
incumbent companies won't grant new competitors access to their
infrastructure, then the free market forces of competition don't work
and infrastructure stagnates, even as consumer anger and desire for
competition rises due to poor service.
Other countries have done more to ensure that the market is open to competition. A 2006 study comparing the American and South Korean broadband markets concluded:
[T]he South
Korean market was able to grow rapidly due to fierce competition in the
market, mostly facilitated by the Korean government's open access rule
and policy choices more favorable to new entrants rather than to the
incumbents. Furthermore, near monopoly control of the residential
communications infrastructure by cable operators and telephone companies
manifests itself as relatively high pricing and lower quality in the
U.S. [Professor Richard Taylor and Eun-A Park via Academic.edu]
And the gap between the U.S. and Korea has only grown wider since then.
The idea of a regulated market
being more conducive to competition may be alien to free market
ideologues, but telecoms and internet is a real world example of
deregulation leading to monopolization instead of competition in lots of
markets.
The Obama administration is trying to undercut the whole mess by building new publicly-funded wireless networks to offer fast 4G internet across the U.S.
Whether this public investment will really prove effective at bringing
internet competition to monopolized markets — and nudging the highly
profitable private companies like Time Warner and Comcast into improving
their services — remains to be seen.
So, many — including Crawford and others — are now calling for stronger regulation of the existing market. At The New Yorker, John Cassidy argued last month:
What we need
is a new competition policy that puts the interests of consumers first,
seeks to replicate what other countries have done, and treats with
extreme skepticism the arguments of monopoly incumbents such as Comcast
and Time Warner Cable. [The New Yorker]
But he's skeptical we'll get it, noting
that: "The new head of the Federal Communications Commission, Tom
Wheeler, is a former lobbyist for two sets of vested interests: the
cell-phone operators and, you guessed it, the cable companies."
Source: https://theweek.com/article/index/257404/why-is-american-internet-so-slow
Source: https://theweek.com/article/index/257404/why-is-american-internet-so-slow
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