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May 2007
Fixing universal service
Congress is unlikely to scrap high-cost universal service subsidies. Many lawmakers in predominantly rural states consider continued support for rural telephone service essential to the social and economic welfare of their constituents. |
Rural telephone and cellular carriers have an obvious financial stake in the continuation of high-cost payments. Some consumer groups also oppose changing the system, on the grounds that residential and especially low-income phone users would suffer. |
Related articles in this issue:
Dialing for dollars
Rural telephone companies in the district collect millions of dollars annually in universal service subsidies. Has the time come to let them fend for themselves?
Broadband: not quite universal
Given the state of rural broadband, extending universal service to high-speed Internet access may be premature. |
Nevertheless, the Federal Communications Commission, state
utility regulators and various think tanks have proposed measures
intended to curb rising costs and put the universal service fund on a
firmer financial footing. Reform proposals floated in recent years
include the following:
-
Auctioning off subsidies to cut costs. FCC Chairman Kevin
Martin has endorsed the idea, explored at various times in the past
decade, of holding “reverse” auctions to allocate universal service
funds. The FCC would specify high-cost service areas and then take
bids from rival telecom firms willing to serve each area as the
provider of last resort. The company bidding the lowest
per-subscriber subsidy wins. By forcing providers to reveal their
true costs and become more efficient, “technology neutral” reverse
auctions would inexorably drive down high-cost outlays. Auction
systems have been employed in Latin America to provide Internet
access and pay phone service. But in this country rural telcos have
objected that low bidding would foster inferior service.
- Making states responsible for distributing universal service
funds. A group of economists associated with the Privacy & Freedom
Foundation, a Washington, D.C., think tank, has suggested capping the
high-cost and low-income programs and giving the money to each state
in the form of a performance-based block grant. State administrators
could distribute USF subsidies in any way they see fit, and states
that hit FCC performance targets would be allowed to spend excess
funds on “nonbasic” communications services such as broadband
deployment. Pitting states against each other for limited grant funds
would encourage state administrators to strive for efficiency and
prioritize USF spending, the economists say. States could save money,
for example, by confining support to very remote areas, or low-income
households. Rural telephone companies have lambasted this plan.
- Collecting from all telecom providers. Only about 34 percent
of total telecommunications revenues are subject to USF fees. Why not
broaden the contribution base to encompass all telecom revenues,
including those derived from intrastate traffic, high-speed Internet
access and Internet telephony? The FCC took a step in that direction
last summer, requiring Voice over Internet Protocol companies to
contribute 10.5 percent of their long-distance sales to the USF for
calls that touch the public-switched telephone network. The FCC also
increased the USF levy on cellular service and long-distance calling
cards, but for now intrastate telecommunications and Internet access
provided over cable modems remain exempt from USF contribution
requirements.
- Levying fees on all telephone numbers. Martin has said that
he is “committed to adopting and implementing a numbers-based
contribution system”—USF fees assessed not on long-distance usage but
on all assigned telephone numbers. Charging by the numbers would tap
into a huge, swelling revenue base; roughly 565 million working phone
numbers exist in the United States, according to the FCC, and that
total is growing about 2 percent annually. By imposing a flat
per-number fee on all carriers—wireline and cellular phone companies,
cable firms, VoIP providers—this proposal spreads the universal
service burden evenly across the entire industry and captures
intrastate revenues to boot. Opponents, including some small rural
telcos and the Consumers Union, argue that shifting the contribution
burden from businesses (which make more long-distance calls) to
residences would penalize low-income households.
- Funding the USF from general taxes. Some analysts have
suggested that U.S. taxpayers support universal service, as they do
most federal programs. On purely economic grounds, raising general
tax dollars to fund the USF makes more sense than charging
industry-specific fees, which tend to distort prices and consumer
choice. The universal service fee on long-distance use is
particularly distorting and inefficient because increasing the price
of long-distance induces subscribers to cut back on their minutes or
switch to flat-rate calling plans. Jerry Hausman of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology calculated in a 1998 paper that USF fees cost
the economy at least an additional $1.05 for every dollar in revenue
they produced—more than twice the efficiency cost of raising money
from general taxes. But paying for universal service with general
revenue may require raising taxes—anathema to many lawmakers.
In order to fix universal service, regulators and the telecom
industry must grapple with another contentious issue—intercarrier compensation, a complex set of rules governing who gets paid what for
handling voice and data traffic. National and regional carriers pay
access charges to local telephone companies that originate and
terminate long-distance calls. Because access charges levied by small
rural carriers usually exceed the actual cost of completing calls,
ICC is an implicit subsidy that supplements USF high-cost payments.
But growth in wireless-to-wireless calls and free VoIP services (both
of which bypass interstate and intrastate access charges) together
with proliferating “phantom” or disguised traffic threaten to choke
off this steady revenue stream.
Telecom firms are unlikely to agree to overhaul universal service
without revamping ICC as well, said Tony Clark, chairman of the North
Dakota Public Service Commission. “Intercarrier comp is, for a lot of
rural companies, probably as big if not bigger an issue than
universal service,” he said. “They are joined at the hip, and
everybody recognizes that.”
One stab at a new ICC regime is the FCC's Missoula Plan, named for
the Montana city where the National Association of Regulatory Utility
Commissioners and industry representatives hammered out the details
last year. An attempt to level the regulatory playing field for
different telecommunications technologies and classes of carriers,
the plan would reduce and unify ICC charges while allowing telecom
firms to recover some of their lost revenues from increased line
charges paid by subscribers.
Like reform proposals for universal service, the Missoula Plan has
supporters and detractors, with rural telephone companies and other
wireline carriers generally backing it and cable and wireless
providers opposing it. As of March the FCC was still reviewing
proposed amendments to the plan.
—Phil Davies |
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