A new White House report claims without convincing evidence that eliminating consumer-protection rules in the broadband industry has boosted real incomes by tens of billions of dollars per year. Including a supposed improvement to “consumer welfare,” the report claims an annual benefit of more than $100 billion from killing net neutrality and privacy rules.
The February 2020 “Economic Report of the President” claims that “the Trump Administration’s ‘Restoring Internet Freedom’ order will increase real incomes by more than $50 billion per year and consumer welfare by almost $40 billion per year.” That’s in reference to the Federal Communications Commission’s repeal of net neutrality rules and its related deregulation of the broadband industry.
The White House report also claims a decision by Congress and President Trump to eliminate broadband privacy rules created “additional real income of about $11 billion per year.” That financial benefit will double over the years, the report claims, saying that “After 5 to 10 years when these effects are fully realized, the total impact on real incomes is estimated to be $22 billion.”
How…?
The president’s report covers all these claims in a little more than three pages in a section titled “Consumer savings on Internet access.” The report claims that Obama-era net neutrality rules harmed Americans in this paragraph:
Before the Trump Administration, another FCC rule adopted in 2015 restricted the vertical pricing arrangements of ISPs—that is, monetary transactions between ISPs and the providers of Internet content such as Netflix and Yahoo. The 2015 rule also imposed government oversight on communication services, making it difficult for these companies to quickly respond to competition and provide new goods and services on the market. These vertical pricing and other restrictions are being removed by the FCC through its “Restoring Internet Freedom” order, returning to regulating ISPs under Title I of the Communications Act.
How did removing those rules create a $50-billion-per-year increase in “real incomes” and a $40-billion-per-year increase in “consumer welfare?” The White House report supported that conclusion by pointing to a 2008 study on DSL line sharing, which the White House describes as follows:




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