American Enterprise Institute blogger Mark Jamison has some insights I have not seen elsewhere regarding how new technologies are likely to make existing regulations on net neutrality meaningless. Examples of how technology is making a difference:
1) 5G networks will be based on network slicing, which means the network will be customized to different types of traffic.
2) Netflix is investing in proprietary networks and is becoming less dependent on public ones. Other large gobblers of bandwidth are doing the same.
3) Mobile apps are being used more. Apps are not open but they are targeted to user needs.
A larger lesson -- in markets where technology is changing quickly, regulations have difficulty keeping up. If they are enforced too strictly, they can actually interfere with progress.
Thoughts on business school, economics, NC State, and everyday life from an economist at NC State's business school
Monday, September 11, 2017
Friday, September 1, 2017
Storm economics
Harvey has finally made his exit from Houston and the Gulf Coast. In his wake, a number of economic questions come up. There always is the issue of price gouging after a natural disaster. Although the practice raises ethical challenges, it also is a natural consequence of a price system that beats the heck out of what Venezuela uses to allocate resources.
Tyler Cowan has a Bloomberg column on economic issues related to storms that is worth a quick read. A few key takeaways:
Tyler Cowan has a Bloomberg column on economic issues related to storms that is worth a quick read. A few key takeaways:
- Storms hurt economic growth because they force us to allocate resources away from other goods and toward rebuilding. They also fracture lives and incomes.
- Economic research shows that we are resilient; most who lose their jobs and homes do recover.
- The standard economic approach to federal flood insurance is problematic. Under the current system, we subsidize risky housing investments near oceans and in flood plains. Bailouts to those without insurance reduce the odds that people will insure in the future.