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Competitive v' TopDown: The TV Band White Space Issue

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Sprint buys Nextel (2005) 6 national networks reduced to 4 ' ... PCS test drive. reallocation of microwave links a political obstacle. 1996 Pressler plan ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Competitive v' TopDown: The TV Band White Space Issue


1
Competitive v. Top-Down The TV Band White
Space Issue
  • Thomas W. Hazlett
  • Professor of Law Economics
  • George Mason University
  • twhazlett_at_gmail.com
  • INNOVATION, TECHNOLOGY, AND SPECTRUM POLICY
  • Information Economy Project
  • George Mason University School of Law
  • Sept. 21, 2006

2
Current TV Band Proceeding
  • Unlicensed use of white space
  • Devices approved by FCC for sharing spectrum
    without causing harmful interference to others
  • Overlays defining exclusive rights and assigned
    to owners (presumably via competitive bidding)

3
The FCC Evaluates, Top-Down
  • comparing bands in the public interest
  • crafting rules specific to each allocation
  • weighing pleas from interested parties
  • radio spectrum held hostage
  • command and control reigns
  • case-by-case stalls deployments

4
Incorrect Valuation Model
  • popularity of devices curious metric
  • backwards looking
  • incremental spectrum values going forward
  • Ofcom (2004)
  • Hazlett-Spitzer (2005)
  • Bazelon (2006)
  • S. Korean hotspots
  • access regime conflated w/ property regime
  • low-power devices used in licensed or un
  • fails to account for costs of non-ownership

5
Consumers Suffer, Broadband Lags
  • Take killer app ? mobile telephony
  • 1 trillion annual MOU (USA)
  • 120 billion annual revenues
  • gt 150 billion annual consumer surplus
  • Spectrum starved
  • Absolutely ? demand for marginal MHz high
  • consumer value of marginal MHz 10X license
    value
  • Relatively ? US allocation v. EU, e.g.

6
  • December 1, 2004
  • Cingular to Upgrade Data Network
  • By MATT RICHTEL
  • Cingular Wireless, the nation's largest cellphone
    service provider, announced plans yesterday to
    upgrade its high-speed data network, allowing
    faster downloads than are now available on many
    home broadband connections
  • In October, Cingular Wireless closed its
    acquisition of ATT Wireless, creating the
    nation's largest wireless company with 47 million
    subscribers. Cingular said the acquisition gave
    it the additional radio spectrum necessary to
    deploy the high-speed network.

7
GigaOM
Written by Katie Fehrenbacher- Posted Friday,
October 6 at 1006 AM T-Mobile said it would
spend a total of 2.64 billion on a 3G network in
the U.S. that it would start to deploy in the
fourth quarter of this year. The company said
most of the work on the 3G network would be
completed in 2007 and 2008. The 2.6 billion is
in addition to the 4.2 billion the company has
already spent as the top bidder in the AWS
wireless spectrum auction, in which T-Mobile US
won 120 licenses. The company needed the spectrum
licenses to build an effective 3G network.
T-Mobile US said the auction doubled its
spectrum nationally
8
Cellular Spectrum vs. GDP/cap

Source Hazlett (2004)
9

Cellular Spectrum vs. GDP/cap

USA lags by 100 MHz
Source Hazlett (2004)
10
One outcome industry consolidation
  • Cingular buys ATT Wireless (2004)
  • Sprint buys Nextel (2005)
  • 6 national networks reduced to 4

11
World's leading market showcase for wireless
data
Feb. 18, 2005
  • Sydney "has become the world's leading market
    showcase for wireless data services, says U.S.
    technology research Gartner in Australia A
    reason wireless broadband is taking off here The
    government sold off radio spectrum for such
    services relatively cheaply. Privately held
    Personal Broadband snapped up its license in 2001
    for only about US7.5 million.

12
Sheeps Clothing
  • How we got white space
  • Not WiFi (1995)
  • Not FCC TV Band NOI (2002)
  • Federal Radio Act (1927)
  • Coase (1959) identified as inefficient
  • Tragedy of the Commons
  • or anti-commons

13
8 TV channels per market
  • 67 channels set aside per market

14
The U.S. Broadcast TV Band
Channels 2 4 5 6 7 13
14 36 38 -
69 MHz 54 72 76 88 174
216 470 608 614
806
15
The U.S. Broadcast TV Band
Channels 2 4 5 6 7 13
14 36 38 -
69 MHz 54 72 76 88 174
216 470 608 614
806 Allocated
1939 1945
1949 - 1953
16
DTV TransitionTop-Down State of the Art
  • 8 channels of analog (1700 sta/210 TV mkts)
  • using 402 MHz of VHF/UHF
  • 50 channels of digital
  • using 294 MHz of VHF/UHF
  • plus unlicensed devices performing under FCC
    specifications
  • and zero opportunity to transact for more
    efficient organization of TV Band

17
Efficient Solution
  • Overlays
  • PCS test drive
  • reallocation of microwave links a political
    obstacle
  • 1996 Pressler plan
  • enabling complex spectrum sharing
  • as in flexible use licensed bands
  • producing tens of billions in annual consumer
    gains
  • leaving option to use MHz for low-power devices

18
Spectrum Sharing
  • Most intense under constraints of
  • private ownership
  • economic competition
  • Unlicensed access plausible when
  • sharing is simple
  • few parties involved
  • Unlicensed efficient when it cannot be nested in
    private property rights solution

19
Technologies Cited as Rationales for Spectrum
Regime Shift

20
Valuing Spectrum Property Rights
  • The Broadcasting Method
  • Define a market by regulation
  • Count all activity as a product
  • The Economic Method
  • marginal social gain from particular rights
  • measures value of outputs enabled
  • Ex WISP as supplier
  • unlicensed WISPs buy other inputs
  • Clearwire or Verizon buy spectrum inputs

21
Unlicensed Valuation
  • The most immediate debate-forcing fact is the
    breathtaking growth of the equipment market in
    high-speed wireless communications devices, in
    particular the rapidly proliferating 802.11x
    family of standards (best known for the 802.11b
    or Wi-Fi standard), all of which rely on
    utilizing frequencies that no one controls.
  • Yochai Benkler (2002), p. 30.

22
Counter Revolution
  • The passion behind this counter-revolution
    comes from the success of the most important
    spectrum commons so farthe unlicensed spectrum
    bands that have given us Wi-Fi networks.
  • Lawrence Lessig, Spectrum for All, CIO Insight
    (March 14, 2003)

23
Uses Broadcast Method
  • Counts devices
  • 300 million TV sets, by analogy, value TV band
  • Ignores property rights of network elements
  • DSL, CM subscriptions driving WiFi LANs
  • Ignores alternative property rights regimes
  • which could host low power devices
  • Ignores opportunity costs of regulation
  • coordination by power limits exclude, e.g., many
    efficient WANs

24
Residential Broadband (2004, USA)
  • 35.3 million households (year-end, FCC)
  • 21.4 million cable modem
  • 13.8 million DSL
  • 0.5 million wireless (including satellite)
  • 8.7 million Wi-Fi homes
  • 50/50 home networking market split

25
Low Powered Apps
  • can be supplied via exclusively owned spectrum
    rights
  • Microsoft owned radio space
  • FCC owned radio space
  • just as a Central Park supplied via exclusively
    owned land rights
  • But WWANs need exclusive ownership
  • Coordination complex
  • Wi-Fi not a competitor in 120B mobile market
  • Low power devices, spectrum sharing, all over
    licensed cellular bands

26
Under Utilized ISM Bands
 
Source McHenry
McCloskey (2004, p. 95)
27
Source Results are estimates based on
empirical model calibrated in Thomas W. Hazlett
and Roberto Muñoz, Welfare Effects of Spectrum
Policy (Aug. 2004).
28
Source Morgan Stanley, Q2 2005 Global Technology
Databook, Global Equity Research (June 1, 2005),
18, 20.
29
The Irony of the Optimal Spectrum Commons
  • You cant get there from here
  • Using administrative allocation
  • Efficiencies of market allocation vital
  • Reveal rival opportunities
  • Embrace open entry in access regimes
  • Exclusive ownership rights, with appropriate
    competition, discover the commons

30
Ethernet spectrum in a tube
  • Who creates the spectrum commons?
  • Spectrum tube owners.
  • And the general case corporations
  • Common property
  • Created by exclusive ownership rights
  • Confusion between
  • Attractive access regimes
  • Optimal property regimes

31
Unlicensed Command Control
  • Apple proposed U-PCS
  • FCC allocated 30 MHz (1993)
  • Consumer welfare disaster
  • Regulation (LBT) proved unworkable
  • Regulation endogenous
  • Reallocation long and difficult
  • Tragedy ? not revealing the demands of Cisco,
    Microsoft, Intel, or Google

32
Thank you.
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