You could try holding your breath till the next election.
The future of NBN may become clearer then....
Indeed. Although, the coalition's NBN position has moved considerably over the last few years.
In 2007, they said that Labor's (then) 12Mbps FTTN plan was a waste of money.
In 2009 they said that the new FTTP NBN was a huge waste of money.
In 2010 they didn't have any detailed policy, just a vague outline.
In early 2011 they said they would scrap the NBN and replace it with 12Mbps FTTN (Yes, that's the same system they said was a waste of money in 2007) built by the private sector.
By late 2011, Turnbull was hinting at 40-80Mbps FTTN, mostly by the private sector.
Now, we've got them saying they will continue the fibre NBN rollout until all existing contracts are complete. They will also continue the regional wireless and rural satellite portions of the NBN. Once the existing fibre rollout contracts are complete they'll still use FTTP in new estates but scale back existing areas to FTTN, but continue to have it govt-built by NBN co.
With over 60 countries now doing FTTP, I suspect that by 2016 when the existing NBN contracts are complete, it will be patently obvious (even to Turnbull) that FTTN is well past obsolescence, and if fibre doesn't continue then it will soon be apparent that FTTN is not up to the job.
Even though I think the contracts were a rip off, .....
On what do you base that assessment?
More trouble at the top ?
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/bus...nstruction-chief/story-e6frgaif-1226554691246
If you were offered a brand new car, for no increase in the costs of your currnt car, would you say no?
Really its free is it? Wow..
In fact it is costing more, the real scenario would be:
You pay tax to the car company and they use that money to design a new car with something that you don't need but is new, then charge you the same amount as you were paying for your previous car (which was fine by the way)
So yeah its costing us money, you just dont see it as its being paid out of our tax (or national debt) or whatever.
The NBN is a big white elephant, its a pity the average labor supporter is too stupid to see it, and now our kids will be paying for it for years to come..
Oh 4G? its pretty fast..
Really its free is it? Wow..
In fact it is costing more, the real scenario would be:
You pay tax to the car company and they use that money to design a new car with something that you don't need but is new, then charge you the same amount as you were paying for your previous car (which was fine by the way)
So yeah its costing us money, you just dont see it as its being paid out of our tax (or national debt) or whatever.
The NBN is a big white elephant, its a pity the average labor supporter is too stupid to see it, and now our kids will be paying for it for years to come..
Oh 4G? its pretty fast..
Government debt is a liability owed by the taxpayer, so whether it's funded directly by the taxpayer or borrowings, it ultimately makes no difference.The NBN is not being funded from tax revenue, it's being funded from debt (the issue of bonds, to be precise), which will subsequently be repaid from user revenue (not taxation revenue). That's what the usage fees of the NBN are for.
Government debt is a liability owed by the taxpayer, so whether it's funded directly by the taxpayer or borrowings, it ultimately makes no difference.
The main issue here is that this back of the envelope plan B was never subject to a cost-benefit analysis. It was never weighed up against other demands for government dollars. With this project, we are reliant purely on the judgement of politicians to spend taxpayer dollars wisely without any critical analysis. This is never good, but recent history inspires even less confidence.
What a nonsense.
A 10 year back of the envelope plani love how you guys just completely ignore reality, completely ignore history and treat these decisions as somehow instant, i suppose you have to do that in order to shift the blame/throw mud in the direction you want to.
- Broadband Advisory Group 2003 (Howard)
- Telstra Copper Upgrade Plans 2005 (Howard)
- Broadband Connect Policy & OPEL Networks 2006/07 (Howard)
- G9 Consortium 2006/7 (Howard)
- Creation of NBN Co April 2009 (Rudd)
So Cynical, there numerous examples of this government going of half cocked on a hair brained plan.
As DrSmith is suggesting, this could still be added to the list of failures.
Highlighting that the Howard government was thorough with its analysis does not mean Labor took any notice.
The asylum seeker issue has proven they chose to make policy on the run, rather than adopt and adapt working policy.
Most of the policy they have introduced has lacked vision and is in no way Nation building.IMO
I understand you may see it differently and the NBN may put us at the forefront of something, I'm yet to have someone tell me what it will be.
Meanwhile we slide down the industrialised scale toward the bulk mining pit, joining South America and South Africa.
Government debt is a liability owed by the taxpayer, so whether it's funded directly by the taxpayer or borrowings, it ultimately makes no difference.
The main issue here is that this back of the envelope plan B was never subject to a cost-benefit analysis. It was never weighed up against other demands for government dollars. With this project, we are reliant purely on the judgement of politicians to spend taxpayer dollars wisely without any critical analysis. This is never good, but recent history inspires even less confidence.
Government debt is a liability owed by the taxpayer, so whether it's funded directly by the taxpayer or borrowings, it ultimately makes no difference.
The main issue here is that this back of the envelope plan B was never subject to a cost-benefit analysis. It was never weighed up against other demands for government dollars. With this project, we are reliant purely on the judgement of politicians to spend taxpayer dollars wisely without any critical analysis. This is never good, but recent history inspires even less confidence.
.....
As for CBA, let me repeat (once more) the argument why it's utterly worthless:
The NBN is an enabling technology. It is impossible to value the benefits of building it, because we don't know what most of the benefits will be. One could only guess about developments for the next 5 or 10 years, let alone the next 50 years. Any CBA would therefore be completely inaccurate.
....
Until it pays it back, if it pays it back, it is still a liability to the taxpayer. This is fundamentally no different to a home loan being a liability to the home owner until it is paid out.Of course it makes a difference. The NBN will pay back its own debt, unlike typical government spending.
The only scenario where "it makes no difference" would be if the NBN was cancelled prior to completion (and would therefore not generate sufficient revenue to repay debt) or;
The assumed figures on cost and takeup were completely inaccurate. This is so far proving to be unlikely, and even if there were to be a massive blowout in costs (say 100%), then the revenue earned from the NBN would still mean the liability to taxpayers would be a fraction of the cost to build it, making it "different" to other Govt expenditure.
It certianly wasn't the vision the Labor government started with. It was born out of the failure of their original FTTP model.I love the oft-repeated "back of the envelope" BS, which has no basis in reality. I guess if you say it often enough it becomes the truth.
With regard to comparisons between the copper network and the NBN, the copper network to communication was like the development of motorised vehicles to transport whereas the NBN is an upgrade.The NBN is most certainly not based "purely on the judgement of politicians", and was in fact the recommendation of many telecommunication experts and the panel set up to assess the NBN Mk1. FTTP is the future of telecommunications, which is a fact apparently known to companies like Google, MS, Intel and hundreds of telecom companies around the World. But alas, not yet to conservative luddites.
As for CBA, let me repeat (once more) the argument why it's utterly worthless:
The NBN is an enabling technology. It is impossible to value the benefits of building it, because we don't know what most of the benefits will be. One could only guess about developments for the next 5 or 10 years, let alone the next 50 years. Any CBA would therefore be completely inaccurate.
To illustrate my point, I suggest you do a CBA for the copper telephone network rollout, valuing only the uses/benefits that were known in (say) 1910.
Let me know if the per-capita cost (which is about the same as the NBN, adjusted) would be worth it, considering the only use would be basic person-person voice communications.
If you don't think that's a valid argument/analogy, please explain why not.
Until it pays it back, if it pays it back, it is still a liability to the taxpayer. This is fundamentally no different to a home loan being a liability to the home owner until it is paid out.
There is still the question of whether the money would have been better spent on other projects ot put another way, a comparison of relative return of investment on other projects.
It certianly wasn't the vision the Labor government started with. It was born out of the failure of their original FTTP model.
With regard to comparisons between the copper network and the NBN, the copper network to communication was like the development of motorised vehicles to transport whereas the NBN is an upgrade.
The upgrade is generally supreceeded with another upgrade in a far shorter timeframe than the original innovation. Who knows how the communications landscape will look in 50 years.
One cannot rely on the hope of what miay or may not happen in the longer term to avoid comparisons against other government expenditures. To do so is a recepie for poor expenditure outcomes.
With regard to comparisons between the copper network and the NBN, the copper network to communication was like the development of motorised vehicles to transport whereas the NBN is an upgrade.
None of the above addresses any sort of financial comparison against other uses for government monies.God where do your even start with this drivel. One point might be; the fly ridden pestilent reminisce of a pre industrialised agrarian culture that had managed to crawl with glacial speed over a couple of millennia to the point, of, considering a peddle powered mechanical sewing device in the homes of a tiny fraction of the worlds population was the zenith of modern achievement... And then the introduction of motorised transport and in a few short decades mass production of said transport and then the hundred years till now.... OH ooops now I've seen my error, It's been basically the same progression as of the last couple of thousand of years.
I've watched with delicious interest the unfolding of this thread and have admired the surgical and incredibly patient demolition of those who for ideological reasons have no interest in progressing positive development in this country. All power to your arm boys. The tiller steering of that first Benz? Only history will tell us where we are in the comparative time lines drawn by our 'oh so wise' doctors pronunciation. Or Maybe he'd care, oracle like, to enlighten us all?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?