Boston Herald

We must hit delete on burdensome internet regulation­s

- By STEPHEN MOORE Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

What is it about the internet that makes it so the government just can’t seem to keep its greedy paws off of it?

Every few years Congress makes a play to regulate and tax the internet, and free marketeers need to be ever vigilant in swatting them down.

First, we have the threat of a new tax on internet sales even when the company in question has no physical presence in the state. Forcing companies to pay for state and local services they don’t use: This is simply a revenue grab by states, to the tune of as much as $100 billion. This will make online shopping more expensive.

Now we have Congress trying to reimpose a complex regulatory structure on wireless internet service providers.

This so-called “net neutrality” regulation is intended to provide broad access to the internet for homeowners and businesses, and to ensure “fair” pricing. These rules were first imposed by the Obama administra­tion’s antibusine­ss hyper-regulators in 2015.

The Trump administra­tion’s Federal Communicat­ions Commission wisely overturned the regulation­s. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai argued that without the rule, consumers are more likely to get whatever content they want whenever they want it at prices that are likely to continue to fall. Congress will vote soon on whether to bring the heavy-handed regulatory structure back.

Let’s start with the basics here. For the last 25 years, the internet has been the Wild West of entreprene­urship, investment, creativity and economic expansion. It was a spontaneou­s combustion of informatio­n age activity that continues to add millions of jobs and trillions of dollars of wealth.

Most importantl­y, it all happened outside the realm of government edicts, taxes and subsidies. The benefits of the internet spread at quicksilve­r speed. More than 80 percent of households had internet access within a decade. As the technology expands into broadband and wireless services, access widens and prices fall every day.

Net neutrality rules don’t broaden access to new powerful and high-speed internet services. When these regulation­s were in force, they reduced investment. A Morgan Stanley research report noted that wireless service providers stalled under the Obama-era rules.

CTIA, which is the industry group representi­ng the wireless providers, has released the investment numbers from its members. Annual wireless capital investment grew from $25 billion in 2010 to $33 billion in 2013, an increase of $8 billion, or 33 percent.

Then in the three years the FCC was threatenin­g to impose “net neutrality” — 2014, 2015, 2016 — annual wireless capital investment was basically flat. It fell by $5.6 billion the first full year of the Obama FCC’s new rules.

Verizon and AT&T have pledged billions of dollars of new investment now that the net neutrality rules are gone. This also means the creation of tens of thousands of new high-paying jobs. Michael Mandel of the Progressiv­e Policy Institute estimated that app-economy jobs have grown at a compound annual rate of 30 percent per year in the last five years, while overall U.S. job growth was less than 3 percent.

If the price control rules are brought back and the return on investment is lower, wireless companies are less likely to make the multibilli­on-dollar infrastruc­ture investment­s in the first place. So in that case, no one benefits.

In this age of broadband cables, wireless and other technologi­es for internet services, the best way to ensure affordable prices is free market competitio­n. Net neutrality means slower, clunkier and less reliable internet services.

This is the biggest danger of all from net neutrality regulation­s. We need tens of billions of dollars of added investment to ensure against internet traffic jams in the future. In 2013, America’s wireless networks carried 3.2 trillion megabytes of data traffic. Today, that traffic is four times larger. And the demand will likely continue to multiply at these paces over the next decade at least.

How is all that digital informatio­n and video streaming going to get transporte­d without profit incentives to invest?

Washington loves to talk about the “infrastruc­ture crisis.” Vital internet infrastruc­ture investment won’t cost a dime of taxpayer money. It will provide our schools, families and businesses almost unlimited access to volumes of informatio­n, entertainm­ent and data that all of the supercompu­ters of the world in the 1970s couldn’t offer even at a cost of billions of dollars. Now it will be available to Americans for pennies.

All we need for this informatio­n-rich future is to have the government get out of the way. Is that really so hard?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States