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NBN Rollout Scrapped


Wondering what your thinking on the 121 POI's is?

Perhaps the noalition will want to go back to the 2 POI's in every capital plan? apparently its cheaper?
 

I can tell by your post that you don't understand market fundamentals etc.

I can tell that you don't understand the problems with monopolies.

I don't see how using uncompetitive providers who are gouging ADSL2 customers is really relevant, no, because the NBN is supposed to drive competitive pricing is it not?

However as you can summise, I actually advocate people paying for the service ( ie paying for a good speed at a reasonable price) I just don't think that we should be wasting money NOW for a service which we MIGHT need in 15 years time,

when we can use the $$$$ NOW to make way more monet NOW.

I am pissing up a wall against your arguments, as you want to give the majority faster pr0n and illegal downloads,

I want improved exports allowing better healthcare, education and living conditions.

and only one of our two proposals can deliver what I believe is right for an ageing population
MW

PS I would Love to have 10000 speed internet NOW, but it truly is not needed, and contrary to what your beloved Labor party believes, there are not bottomless pits of money, we all have to pay for stuff, which leaves us less able to afford other stuff.
 

I think you have answered your own question.

You won't stop So-Cynical beating the drum, when Labor go down the toilet, he will probably join the Salvos.
Which to my thinking, would be more beneficial.
 
So to give these 30% of small businesses access to something that might benefit their businesses, lets [highlight]cripple the mining industry, education and other industry to the tune of $50 billion dollars... [/highlight]

Well done

MW

Would you care to explain how the NBN will do this? Feel free to insert as much detail as required to support your argument.

Don't forget to factor the coalition's $35bn+ alternative plan into your calculations. And also, let us know by what method building the NBN will cripple all these industries, based on the known funding arrangements (ie the issue of infrastructure bonds) for the NBN, and therefore its relevance to the funding or taxation of the industries you cited.
 
Wondering what your thinking on the 121 POI's is?

Perhaps the noalition will want to go back to the 2 POI's in every capital plan? apparently its cheaper?

I think there are pros and cons to both. The 14 certainly made life easy for smaller ISPs, but it wasted already-present infrastructure for the bigger ISPs.

I don't think the coalition can/would go back as they complained about the 14POI model to begin with, and the 121 are all built and operational now in any case.
 

Are you 12 with your constant rolleyes?

Anyhoo, let me explain.

1. $50 billion has to come from somewhere
2. The government directs this to NBN at the expense of other infrastructure projects with greater ROI
3. This in effect decreases the ability of those industries to grow.
4. This in effect screws them ( and also the beneficiaries of taxation of those projects )

I don't even think that a FTTN is needed ATM so I hold that it is $50 billion wasted, just that the coalition's plan is $15 billion less wasted.

So,
Mature up, stop rolling eyes and start thinking of the community at large and not your internet gaming habits and pings,

MW
 

Yes, the "$50bn" has to come from somewhere....

~$30bn will come from the issue of Australian Infrastructure bonds.
~$11bn will come from NBN Co raising on debt markets
The rest is lease and migration payments to Telstra over time, and comes from NBN Co's operating revenue.

Please give an example of an alternative spend the Government could make, and (more importantly) how that spend would provide an ROI. Also, how not spending that money will cripple those industries. Last time I looked, the mining industry wasn't struggling and the education "industry" were extremely strong supporters of the NBN due to the additional opportunities it will provide.


I should also point out that the construction of the NBN itself directly leads to job creation (construction, IT), manufacturing industry support (eg: fibre cable, cabinets, construction materials) plus it leads to additional company tax, income tax and GST revenues.


Oh, and I haven't played an online game since I dabbled in Starcraft 1, which was probably 7 or 8 years ago.
 

You have misunderstandings of some basic fundamentals about money creation.

You cannot acknowledge that money cannot be magicked up, and must come from somewhere.
You cannot acknowledge opportunity cost, or that anything else can have much greater ROI than the NBN
You cannot acknowledge that alternative investment also creates jobs.
You cannot acknowledge the concept of exports vs imports.
You cannot acknowledge the concept of growth of a business.


You have clearly not ever owned or run a business in the real world, and whilst I understand that theorising is enjoyable for you, it is clear that we have both made decisions about what we think is best for the country, and those opinions differ.

I cannot in any way, ever, convince you that $50 billion (from whatever sources) invested in, for example rail and ports would enable massive increase in exports and hence new money into the country to pay for many services such as health, education and, dare I say it the NBN when the time is right.

An analogy would be small business

Say I own the pharmacy in a medical centre I also own (as one of my friends does)

I could run i3 computers which very very easily run my dispensing programs

Say I can access $20000

I can either update my 6 computers to i7-3970x computers, the computing power which I may need in 15 years time, futureproofing my IT needs somewhat,

or I can add a few extra carpark spaces in the spare lot I own adjaceant to my very busy business....

I'll leave it at that.

MW

Anyhoo, off to the fluoridation thread, much greater logic shown in that thread
 

I just told you where it was coming from.
You haven't given an example of an alternative that would generate a better ROI.
I can acknowledge that, but you haven't acknowledged that the NBN will create jobs
The NBN is not really relevant to a discussion of imports vs exports.
There will be many businesses that will grow as a result of infrastructure like the NBN.

You have clearly not ever owned or run a business in the real world, and whilst I understand that theorising is enjoyable for you, it is clear that we have both made decisions about what we think is best for the country, and those opinions differ.

I do own and run a business in the real World, and have done so for the last 10-odd years.

Not that I'm against such infrastructure, but unless they were toll roads or the Govt charged for port access sufficiently to recover the investment, then they would become a charge on the budget, unlike the NBN.

Any improvement in port efficiency would also make imports cheaper, so it's a double-edged sword.

I strongly support Australian manufacturing, but more efficient ports and better roads will not overcome our grossly overvalued dollar.


Anyhoo, off to the fluoridation thread, much greater logic shown in that thread

Perhaps from you, but not everyone if its anything like an average fluoride discussion!
 

Possibly these small businesses don't have the resources available to them to really understand how the NBN can benefit them. I've helped a few over the years make significant cost savings with the simple IT knowledge I have. With NBN access I know I could cut their costs even more, especially via software as a service

Yesterday I spent 3.5 hours of my 8.33 hour day fighting with Telstra to get 4 faults fixed due to rotting copper.

So if we can the NBN and the NoBN, is the Government going to legislate that the private sector AKA Telstra has to now spend a few billion on fixing up the copper network they've left to deteriorate so they can prob up the high yielding dividend?

As for crippling the mining industry, I'd say the CEOs of the companies have done pretty well at shooting themselves in the foot. All ego and no economic sense amongst them. Rising CEO salaries and bonuses = market forces = good. Rising mining worker wages = union thuggery = bad. Yet my understanding is market forces use price signals to show when a resource is in high demand, the price goes up and then you either work out how to use the resource more efficiently, or the high price brings in more supply.
 
Turnbull's plans will send a chill through all those rusted on believers in the efficiency of a Labor-run "business enterprise". Yes Myths, the Conroy version of the NBN Rollout will be scrapped.

(MY bolds)

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opi...-for-team-abbott/story-e6frg74x-1226588738616
 

I have just given you an example... seriously are you trolling?

I never said that the NBN would not generate jobs, however, I will say that $50 billion spent in an alternative, such as roads, rail etc (which mind you, source a lot of material requirements locally as opposed to importing it) would also generate jobs.

Of course it is not really relevant for imports / exports as it will no doubt result in cash outflow from the country.... AFAIAC there are few enterprises that the government should undertake which should not take this into consideration.... however I do acknowledge that the current Labor government does not cost or think about any of their so called projects, as evidenced by the NBN.

Which businesses will grow as a result of the NBN?

Really, truly, I really am unaware of which ones will benefit, please explain how these businesses will result in improved efficiency for the economy and improved exports in excess of the increased consumption and imports that will result from the NBN (however, as evidenced previously, I doubt you will give a serious answer to this)

And remember, I have no problem with improving speeds, but I just think a timed, measured rollout with thought, realistic deadlines and cost-benefit analysis is the way to go, not some hastily made backhanded comment which was forced into policy by the third worst pm of my lifetime, and continued by the worst pm of my lifetime.

MW
 

There is nothing new there. Turnbull is just repeating the same stuff he's been saying for months. Of course, back in 2007 he described FTTN as a colossal waste of money and unnecessary. Now, he thinks it's the way to go.

He says "people will be shocked" about how long the NBN will take, and what it will cost. I disagree, and only time will tell who ends up being right. Turnbull certainly has no evidence to support his assertion that it will be anything different to what is contained in the most recent corporate plan, otherwise he would have published it. He's just making a political statement.

The other thing I will absolutely stake my reputation on is that, speed for speed, the retail prices for FTTN will not be cheaper than the NBN. Contrary to Turnbull's claim that his solution will be "more affordable for consumers". This simply will not happen. It cannot, because the NBN's low entry-level pricing depends on the subsidy that comes from selling high-end speeds (50Mbps+) to high end users. Without that revenue, even a cheaper build cannot result in lower prices on the lower speeds.


Even if Turnbull goes to the election planning to scale it back to FTTN, it is by no means certain that he can (or will still want to) after the election, for the reasons I have already detailed:

• The unknown cost of buying Telstra's copper network (est $15-20bn);
• The unknown cost of remediating the poor condition of Telstra's copper network;
• The unknown cost of buying Telstra's and/or Optus' HFC networks and converting them into open access;
• The unknown cost of cancelling existing FTTP rollout contracts;
• The unknown cost of cancelling existing migration contracts with Telstra and Optus;
• The unknown results of the CBA (ie: what happens if it recommends FTTP?);
• The likely need to get legislation through an unfriendly Senate;
• The massive recent growth of FTTP networks Worldwide (Alcatel's Copper:FTTP revenue ratio went from 71:29 to 50:50 between 2011 and 2012);
• The fact that a downgrade will means that huge parts of our major cities will be left with vastly inferior broadband to that available in numerous regional areas. (ie: It is politically tenable that Parramatta will have worse broadband than Armidale, Townsville, Darwin and all of Tasmania for example?
 

I raised this point maybe 12 months ago.

Politically how does the noalition sell the fact that Townsville will have FTTP/H and Cairns wont...stopping the Townsville rollout will leave some suburbs with and some without... politically it cant be done, cant be sold.
 

So he just making a political statement? And you're not? I would trust his word ahead of that of an anonymous Labor lackey.

The other thing I will absolutely stake my reputation on is that, speed for speed, the retail prices for FTTN will not be cheaper than the NBN.

What reputation do you have? All your stuff is NBNSpin. You may have a high reputation in Labor circles. But outside of that, the only reputation you have to lose is that you picked the wrong side and you will end up with egg on your face.
 
Its the country people that gain the most.
I really can't see the Nationals letting the rollout to those areas not happen.

There is a certain logic in the cities to try to work out a better solution. My area, Ascot Vale was built in the 19th century and will be difficult to roll out in. Probably why it is last on the list. The trouble is the older suburbs are usually the richer suburbs and they want FTTP.

I don't think Turnball wanted this job. He had to take it from Abbott who knows it is a poison pill.
 

I think Turnbul has learnt a lot about politics and is just playing along I doubt very much that he would hold his current line once in government but still think the Coalition would have some hybrid NBN where there would be winners and Labor electorates.
 

Calm down Calliope debate the issue, read up on Whirlpool if you don't like Myths facts, the Coalitions position is fractured and not very realistic.
 
Calm down Calliope debate the issue, read up on Whirlpool if you don't like Myths facts, the Coalitions position is fractured and not very realistic.

Calm down IFocus and look before you leap. How can you say something as silly as "Myths facts"?
What Labor supporters call "facts" are usually just spin. But don't worry, Turnbull will begin to dismantle the NBN white elephant come September; so Conroy and Quigley are on borrowed time. However I dare say they can do a lot of damage in six months if they put their minds to it.
 
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