|
|
To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu
-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
|
Choosing a vote: as easy as O-E-C-D? By David Braue, ZDNet Australia November 22, 2007 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/blogs/fullduplex/soa/Choosing-a-vote-as-easy-as-O-E-C-D-/0,139033349,339283986,00.htm
Well, here we are. After years of bluster, measured progress and loads of annoyance, Australia's broadband users head to the polls on Saturday with a score to settle. The real question, of course, is with whom is the score to be settled? With John Howard, who some say has failed to guide Australian telecoms to its potential? Or with Kevin Rudd, who has been quick to criticise the government but seems to be lacking more constructive options? If you're voting on Saturday and haven't yet made up your mind, put on a blindfold and grab your dartboard. If you'd like to get a bit more scientific, consider the age-old question that I have always used to choose whom to vote for: are we better off than we were when [insert politician's name] took office? Howard's term has seen major changes in the telecommunications industry in Australia and out of it. Broadband Internet, wireless Internet, HDTV, 3G, MP3s, Windows 98 and even Google were just twinkles in the eyes of some fresh-faced creative types when he took office, but all now play a significant role in Australia's day-to-day functioning. None of this is contentious: what is contentious, however, is the debate over how best to bring Australian broadband to world standards. Figures from the OECD are often touted by one political party or another as either a commendation or a condemnation of Australia's broadband policy. In the name of answering the question of whether we are in fact better off now than we were before, I thought it would be instructive to look at some of the OECD figures that weren't seized during lame attempts at positive spin.
Broadband penetration (long-term growth)
Broadband penetration (current growth)
Fibre Internet
Pricing
Speed By my eye, Australia has more or less held its position towards the top of the middle third of the OECD countries, in most categories, for the better part of this decade. Is this good enough? Not necessarily. Should we really be aiming to knock Japan, Denmark and the like out of the top spot? Not really. But does broadband policy need tweaking? Most definitely. The election's potential role in this tweaking remains to be seen. Could a Labor government improve our world rankings by making broadband faster, cheaper, and more popular? Can Australia really top the broadband charts, or should it even expect to? And if we did, would we know what to do with our superconnected selves? Whichever party wins on Saturday, it will inherit a telecommunications industry that has, despite obstacles (many self-imposed by Telstra) enjoyed significant progress over the past eleven years. A change of government doesn't necessarily mean that has to change, and well-placed policies might even speed up the process -- if only because Telstra is likely to be nicer to a Labor government than it has been to Howard's. I can't tell you who's going to win on Saturday, and I certainly won't tell you how to vote. One thing is sure, though: with Telstra still fighting regulation, its competitors still fighting for market share, the government fighting to push through its WiMax-fibre network, and the digital switchover due to begin in the next term of government, it's going to be interesting to watch. How much will broadband policy affect your vote on Saturday? Can anything other than the private market increase our world rankings? Does it really even matter anyway?
Copyright © 2009 CBS Interactive, a CBS Company. All Rights Reserved. |