The Foundation for a More Competitive Wireless Broadband Market?

Michael Graham
Posted by Michael Graham
on January 5th, 2010 in Industry News, Telecom Policy

In anticipation of the FCC unveiling a national broadband plan at its February 17 meeting, both the U.S. Department of Justice and the Obama administration have recently made public recommendations that could signal a meaningful change in the wireless broadband market.

First, in a report filed on January 4 that analyzed the state of competition for broadband Internet access, the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice said that the best way to promote wireless broadband competition was to free up more radio spectrum.

 “The scarcity of spectrum is a fundamental obstacle that the commission should address,” the Justice Department said. “Reallocating spectrum that is being underutilized would encourage the deployment of wireless services and could help to make such services more competitive with wireline offerings.”

The potential increase in wireless spectrum is significant. The FCC could feasibly auction a sizable slice of the available spectrum; increasing the current 500 MHz to 1300 MHz over the next few years.

The DoJ went on to recommend that the FCC should organize any spectrum auctions so big wireless providers in any given geographical area cannot easily win these auctions. In other words, the FCC should foster a competitive wireless broadband market.

The Obama administration then released its recommendations the following day (January 5).  In a letter to the Chairman of the FCC, NTIA chief Lawrence Strickling said the administration also felt that additional measures were needed to ensure competition in markets where customers have little to no choice of broadband providers.

Let’s see: Both the Justice Department and the Department of Commerce are tasking the FCC with a national broadband plan that will dramatically expand the available wireless spectrum and insure that a competitive market is preserved.  Excellent.

As a consumer of both wireless and wireline broadband services, I am anxious to see what the FCC delivers on February 17.

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