Posts Tagged ‘Infrastructure’

Rural Digital Economy is a Real Digital Economy

Friday, February 5th, 2010

I noticed somebody on Twitter earlier this week suggest that if people needed broadband and hadn’t got access to it then they should move. If we take this view we depopulate rural areas so that there is no economic infrastructure at all and we sound the death knell for rural communities. It shows a total lack of understanding of what the digital economy means and a level of ignorance about the impact of digital exclusion that defies belief.

Earlier this week my local council announced that it was seeking European funding for wireless infrastructure in the rural “not spots” in the County. I believe that this is the wrong approach, not that I don’t understand the motivation because rural businesses get to the point where anything will do, but I still believe it’s wrong.

There are, I believe, three elements to the proposal which are fundamentally flawed.

The first is the intention to use European funding – State Aid. State Aid requires four basic conditions to be met. The first is that there must be a clear market failure; the second is that any intervention must not distort the market; the third is that any solution cannot be technology specific and the final one is that the eventual solution must be open to the market. I know that State Aid has been granted for some major infrastructure projects in the past, but this is not a major infrastructure project, this is for the provision of very specific services in a very specific area and the two are not the same.

Let us take these one at a time. Firstly, I believe that there is a market failure. However, this is open to challenge in that the incumbent supplier could claim that it was willing to provide services eventually. Now, I know, just as everybody knows, that this is NOT broadband as we all understand it, but in state aid terms, it is and so, should the incumbent be sufficiently threatened by the market failure proposal they could, in my view, challenge it successfully. This argument also undermines the second condition in which the incumbent could argue that a state aided solution would prevent them from making sufficient return on their investment and make it unlikely that any other provider could enter the market. However unlikely this seems it would weaken the ex-ante case for state aid approval. Thirdly, the application for state aid could only specify the provision for broadband services, it cannot specify a wireless or any other solution so to say that one is applying for European funding for a wireless mesh network is nonsense. Finally, the solution must be available for the wider market, in other words you can only provide the infrastructure you must then get service providers to offer services. The kinds of services that can operate over a basic infrastructure such as might get state aid approval limits the revenue potential for any provider with the result that the sustainability of the network is at risk.

The second is the political impact of doing a project that meets the immediate need. The problem with accepting anything is that it ticks somebody else’s box. It means that rural areas have something and so they can be forgotten for a while longer. I experienced this in the mid 2000’s when there was a state aid application for the provision of broadband services to rural not spots in the West Midlands. The resulting service was satellite based, under capacity, under sold and didn’t deliver a true broadband service. The motivation fitted the criteria we see now; anything will do as long as it’s something. What was worse was that it enabled  regional bodies to say that there was 100% broadband availability in the region, it ticked a box. The agenda moved on and today there are still poorly served villages and not spots in various parts of the county.

The third is to do with sustainability. A basic internet service will deliver just that, basic internet. The potential for value added services such as VOIP, video conferencing, or IPTV are limited. Whilst I believe firmly that business is the key driver for new broadband services it is residences and entertainment that are the sustaining forces.

My final point is that much as I recognise the desperate need for good broadband services in rural areas I fail to see why rural communities should have to accept a second best solution to their urban counterparts. If we accept that it’s okay to provide 20% of the English population with second rate infrastructure because they are unprofitable, irrespective of the potential for social and economic injustice then surely we are all missing the point, just like the individual who suggested that we all move.

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The Infrastructure Debate, Random Jottings

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

I picked up a “Tweet” today from an academic in Boston MA called Danah Boyd who Tweets under the name of zephoria. Although they have the equivalent of our Carter Report, who’s Implementation plan was publicised in timely fashion by Chris yesterday (I would never have found it!), called the National Broadband Plan they are still thinking through how it might impact on Education. Danah Boyd put out a call for peopl’s thoughts and ideas which are being posted here but try as I might I couldn’t get them to give me access, so I thought I might put the thoughts here, and maybe develop them because they’re a bit random at the moment – some might argue that my thoughts are always random – hey ho!

Take the British experience as a benchmark (to be aspired to or to be exceeded is up to you – at least it’s not about health reform). Here, it’s called Next Generation Access, NGA for short though the arguments get blurred between people who talk about core networks, access network, economic benefit and social benefit. Lesson 1 – make sure you and the other person are talking about the same thing! There are a couple of strands to this one, the economic and the social. In economic terms it’s a battle between our two dominant service providers to keep market share. In social terms it’s about the haves and have not’s, what we call digital inclusion, which is where I work.

An early evaluation on what NGA might be worth in terms of ROI was published by the Broadband Stakeholder Group (basically a trade body that advises government) from a consultancy called Plumb – hence, the Plumb Report – you can see it here. While it has been generally ignored it does make a good attempt at putting money into the argument; worth a read but take a deep breath.

It was largely ignored because the UK Government commissioned Francesco Caio (ex- Cable & Wireless) to produce a report that basically said, leave it to the market. You can see it here.The problem with Caio is that it sidesteps the impact of geographical and social exclusion, never really confronts the impact.

The Government was partially persuaded and they produced a digital inclusion action plan:

So Stephen Carter (ex- NTL) was then commissioned to take a wider view and he came up with the much publicised Carter Report, Digital Britain. This forms the basis of UK policy for the next x number of years and has resulted in an implementation plan.

Problems and possibilities? The good stuff is that digital inclusion is embedded into government thinking. The not so good stuff is that it doesn’t communicate down to regional and local government and so there are tensions. Having worked on the first implementation of broadband into UK schools I have no doubt about the impact it has had on education generally. I know that it has widened the gap between those that have access at home and those that do not. I also know that of the 29% of British people who still do not engage with the digital agenda, and that group includes what we call NEETS (Not in Education, Employment or Training) and PPOs,(Persistent and Perpetual Offenders) that their disadvantage and disconnection is deepened because of their exclusion.

Just because you cannot say what NGA will “do” in education doesn’t mean that it will not “do” anything – in 2001 when we began the initial roll out of connectivity to UK schools we only had the vaguest idea of a universal good – the impact has outweighed the original possibility many times and I firmly believe that it will do so again. Not that we don’t have issues: rural exclusion, social exclusion, business competitiveness in areas of poor provision, a weak market place.

What am I saying? I’m saying that you cannot, not do this but if you can, do it equitably with a view to the benefit of every young person and you will reap the rewards a thousand fold, even if you don’t yet know what that reward is!

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