Sunday, 12 April 2015

Net Neutrality

In the last few weeks, there is an increasing furore over net neutrality. Indian legal system is different from a lot of other countries - it is highly regulated and for all my belief in free market, I have not been able to prove to myself that this is bad. So in my first blog post, I want to bring out some arguments that make sense in this regulated world.
I will begin with the telecom space in India. Over the last 15 years or so, it has grown massively - driven by falling prices. I have myself made STD calls at Rs 16 per minute - and this was at a 75% discount (after 11:00 p.m.) Today, I pay one-hundredth that prices - and for mobile which is several times more convenient. I have also seen the scenario 25 years ago where the DoT had a monopoly and it took years (and several hundred Rs in bribe) to get a phone connection. While much of the improvement came because the NDA government kept tweaking the mobile policy til it got it right, I believe the price reduction also happened because of two reasons - the entry of reliance (and the price war it brought) and the separation between TRAI and BSNL (and DoT) together with a (populist?) mandate to reduce prices.
I think the way TRAI functioned is a good example of perfect bureaucracy. Look at the cost structure and the industry size and gradually keep reducing prices. Everyone was happy - the government got popular support (and a lot of money), the operators were ensured profits and a lack of price war, the common man got affordable communication and as prices kept falling a host of innovations came about.
There is no reason why exactly the same mechanism cannot be followed for bandwidth. Begin with estimating the bandwidth cost, put up a cap on the bandwidth prices and keep reducing these as bandwidth usage increases.
Much of the defense of net neutrality that operators are providing is that there is no reason why app developers cannot pay in place of users. Sure, the holes can be punched in that argument but the argument is likely to be upheld in a court of law - and net neutrality is not a fundamental right as of now. As far as I am concerned, net neutrality can go for a toss as long as bandwidth prices are low enough. What we really need is to ensure that telcos are not allowed to disable competing apps like Whatsapp.
My sense is that with 4G, bandwidth prices will be of the order of 1-2p per MB - so regulated prices should come to 50Rs per GB. What the regulator can also do is force arms length deals with OTTs - in other words ask the contracts between telcos and OTTs to be open in terms of the bandwidth costs charged and force telcos to provide internet packs at (say) 10 times this cost. In fact, once the transparency comes about political pressure will take care of the rest.