[opendtv] News: EXCLUSIVE: FCC chief slams cable rates
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 21 Aug 2008 09:48:50 -0400
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/aug/20/fcc-chief-slams-cable-rates/
EXCLUSIVE: FCC chief slams cable rates
Martin sees ineffective competition
Kara Rowland (Contact)
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
NEWSMAKER INTERVIEW:
The nation's top media regulator says he doesn't have the power to
solve the "single biggest problem" facing media consumers and isn't
counting on Congress to act any time soon.
But Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin J. Martin said
the inability of cable subscribers to choose among channels is
keeping prices high and is a sign that the market isn't working.
"Today, consumers pay double what they paid less than a decade ago
and they have fewer choices, not more, and they have to buy a bigger
and bigger bundle of services if they want to get anything," Mr.
Martin told editors and reporters at The Washington Times on Tuesday.
"If you want to buy the Discovery Channel for your children, you have
to buy a package that includes a whole bunch of channels that you
don't want."
Mr. Martin said the prices of other communications services - such as
wireless access or international calling - have fallen in the past
decade, but cable is an exception. In that time, cable channels have
doubled, but the average number of channels that subscribers watch
has increased only from 13 to 15, he said, pointing to Nielsen Media
Research statistics.
The Republican head of the five-member media-regulating agency said
the FCC's job is to promote competition, "but we have to acknowledge
when it doesn't seem to be working." Satellite TV providers don't
create an "effective price constraint" because they typically price
their services on a national basis - making it harder to compete with
regional cable firms - and residents of apartment buildings are often
unable to hook up to satellite dishes, he said.
"One of the things that's most disturbing, I think, and should send a
red flag to any government official and to anybody when they're
looking at industries is when people are trying to hide information
from customers," Mr. Martin said about the cable industry's lack of
disclosing per-channel prices. "For a market to be efficiently
working, people have to be making knowing choices and those choices
have to have real economic consequences."
The solution, he said, is an "a la carte" pricing regime in which
subscribers could opt out of channels they don't want and pay only
for the channels they receive. Various a la carte systems have been
adopted in Canada, Singapore and Hong Kong.
Mr. Martin, who has been pushing for such a measure for years,
acknowledged that it faces an uphill battle because it would require
an act of Congress and the cable industry is strongly opposed to the
idea.
"With no credible economic evidence showing that government mandated
a la carte will reduce the price of video service for the majority of
Americans, and substantial evidence to the contrary, the government
shouldn't interfere with a marketplace that provides the most diverse
programming anywhere in the world," said Brian Dietz, a spokesman for
the National Cable and Telecommunications Association (NCTA).
The trade group has criticized Mr. Martin for failing to account for
increases in the quality of cable programming they say justify higher
fees, including high-definition and on-demand offerings as well as
additional channels. The NCTA has said the cost of cable has fallen
when adjusted for inflation and quality.
In the wide-ranging interview, Mr. Martin repeated his support for
the commission's efforts to punish broadcasters for airing fleeting
expletives. This fall, the U.S. Supreme Court is revisiting broadcast
indecency rules for the first time in 30 years in response to the
FCC's appeal of an lower court's ruling that its policy is "arbitrary
and capricious."
House Democrats, led by Rep. John D. Dingell of Michigan, is
investigating Mr. Martin's management of the FCC for a "possible
abuse of power" and a failure to operate openly. Mr. Martin, however,
said his leadership has been no different from that of previous FCC
chairmen of both parties.
"I've also told the other commissioners I'm happy to end up releasing
to the public when anybody votes," but his colleagues don't want to,
he said. Commissioners vote on items at public meetings or via an
internal electronic system.
Asked whether he plans to stick around after a new administration -
previous chairmen have traditionally stepped down when a new
president takes office - Mr. Martin said, "I don't have any plans to
go anywhere."
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