Network Operators and Content
Providers: Who Bears the Cost?
J. Scott Marcus
Wissenschaftliches Institut für Infrastruktur und
Kommunikationsdienste (WIK)
September 13, 2011
Abstract:
A number of network operators have recently claimed (1) that
their costs are exploding due to increased Internet broadband
traffic associated with video; (2) that, due to market defects,
consumers need not and do not pay the increased costs of the
broadband service; and (3) that it may therefore become
necessary for content providers to subsidise the cost of the
consumer's Internet service - especially as networks evolve to
fibre-based Next Generation Access (NGA).
Under close scrutiny, none of these claims is persuasive. (1)
Internet traffic is indeed increasing, but usage-based cost per
subscriber in the fixed network is fairly constant -
technological improvements are in balance with the growth in
traffic (which is in fact considerably less, in percentage
terms, than it was in past years). (2) Prices for fixed
broadband service are stable because costs are stable - this is
a success of the competitive market, not a failure. In those
instances where costs truly are increasing, network operators
seem to be able to raise prices accordingly. (3) The argument
for cross-subsidies rests on the theory of two-sided markets,
but that theory does not necessarily imply that subsidies should
be flowing from content providers to network operators. If the
greatest challenge to NGA migration is that the incremental
willingness of consumers to pay for ultra-fast broadband is
insufficient to fund the corresponding network upgrades, then
what is apparently needed is more high value high bandwidth
content. One could just as well argue that subsidies should flow
into the content provision industry as out of it - a detailed
examination would be needed.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 85
Keywords: Internet, content provider, network
operator, two-sided market
JEL Classifications: H54, L51, L86, L91
Working Paper Series
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1926768