http://news.com.com/TV+competition+could+save+consumers+big+bucks/2100-1034_
3-6062015.html?tag=nefd.top

TV competition could save consumers big bucks

By Marguerite Reardon
http://news.com.com/TV+competition+could+save+consumers+big+bucks/2100-1034_
3-6062015.html

Story last modified Tue Apr 18 08:05:25 PDT 2006

advertisement

A correction was made to this story. Read below for details.
Competition in the cable TV market from phone companies could save consumers
big bucks, according to a new study released Monday by an economist at the
University of California at Berkeley.

Yale Braunstein, professor in the School of Information at UC Berkeley,
analyzed data from the U.S. Government Accountability Office and the Federal
Communications Commission and calculated that cable television subscription
prices would drop 15 percent to 22 percent in California if cable companies
competed directly with another wireline paid-TV provider, such as a
telephone company.

Braunstein's report, which was commissioned and paid for by AT&T, is one of
the first studies to quantify how much consumers could save if phone
companies competed directly against cable operators in the video market.

AT&T and Verizon Communications have already begun offering TV service in
certain parts of the country.

If telephone companies compete on a wider scale throughout California,
Braunstein anticipates average prices falling about $56.40 per month to
between $43.99 and $47.94 per month. With more than 60 percent of
California's 11.5 million households signed up for cable service, that's a
savings of between $690 million and $1 billion, he said.

Despite the entrance of satellite service in the 1990s, cable still
dominates the paid television market not only in California but throughout
the U.S. Without much competition in the market, prices have soared.
According to a report published by the Federal Communications Commission
last year, cable rates increased 7.8 percent in the five years before the
end of 2004.

"Over the last five years, cable rate increases have far outpaced inflation
and the Consumer Price Index," Braunstein said. "But when faced with
competitive television providers, cable rates have actually gone down in
many markets while services increase."

Other parts of the country could see savings similar to those found in
California, Braunstein said. But the majority of consumers won't see the
benefits of competition overnight. The phone companies argue that outdated
laws that require them to obtain franchise agreements from individual cities
and towns are slowing their deployments.

AT&T and Verizon are currently lobbying in state houses and on Capitol Hill
to change these laws making it easier and faster for them to obtain
franchise agreements. Texas, Virginia and most recently Kansas have passed
legislation allowing new entrants to get a statewide franchise.

"There is nothing wrong with phone companies paying franchise fees," said
Braunstein. "But they shouldn't be used as some kind of barrier to keep
competition out of a market. The process made sense 20 or 30 years ago when
cable TV service was new. But now that the infrastructure is deployed in
these communities, the whole process has lost reasonableness."

Cable companies argue that phone companies should not be given special
treatment regarding franchise requirements.

 
Correction: This story incorrectly suggested that Yale Braunstein's study
found cable prices dropped in California markets where cable providers face
competition from another wireline provider. Braunstein calculated that
subscription prices would drop if such competition existed.


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~

TELECOM-CITIES
Current searchable archives (Feb. 1, 2006 to present) at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Old searchble archives at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to