Coase comes home to roost

There’s a thoughtful piece by my colleague Peter Preston in today’s Observer. Here’s an extract:

The Times spent much of its summer push advertising Times on- and off-line together. The Mail is starting to report an advertising drought turning some areas of the situations vacant columns into permanent digital desert. Mr Rupert Murdoch is calling crisis summits to ponder synergies he scoffed at five years ago.

In short, a moment of profound decision-making approaches. Some papers, like the Daily Express, make no great effort to move with the times. Some, like the Sun, cut back in anguish. Some, like the Guardian, have begun, at great cost, to build a future on the net.

What Peter is picking up on is the working out of a theory first proposed by a British economist, Ronald Coase, in 1937. When the Web first appeared on the scene, journalists thought that it was the potential of online news that was the main danger, and so all the focus of the print media’s response was on news. But in fact that wasn’t where the real threat of the Net lay.

So where does Coase come in? Well, he wrote a seminal paper entitled “The Nature of the Firm” which showed how transaction costs explain the size of firms. If the transaction costs (contracting, purchasing, shipping, etc.) are higher than the costs of doing it in-house, then firms will do it in-house (and expand). If not, they will outsource.

But not all of the activities a firm does are profitable. Nevertheless, it may be necessary to engage in them to support the activities that are profitable. Thus banks operate High Street branches (which are fantastically unprofitable) because they are necessary to support the main activity (which is earning interest on customers’ money, selling them insurance, loans, mortgages, etc.). So all firms are in fact ‘value chains’ of profitable and unprofitable activities.

Which brings us to newspapers. Journalism — finding and reporting news — is fantastically expensive and unprofitable. But advertising — especially classified advertising — is profitable. So you could regard a newspaper as a value chain linking unprofitable journalism with profitable advertising.

Now the problem is that some forms of advertising — classified — work better on the Web than they do in print (mainly because it’s easy to add search facilities). So it was always inevitable that they would gravitate to the Web when it became a mass medium. The main effect of the Net, therefore, has been to dissolve the newspaper value chain by taking out the most profitable activity, and leaving only unprofitable journalism and display advertising (which simply doesn’t work on the Web).

This has been obvious for years. My academic colleagues and I wrote an online course about it in 2002 based on a book by two management consultants. But nobody was interested in the subject then, so we took the course offline. Sigh.

Coase won the Nobel Prize for economics in 1991. Good Wikipedia entry on him here.

Posted in Web

What am I bid to be a phone company?

This morning’s Observer column about eBay’s acquisition of Skype. (Podcast here.)

Why did eBay splash out? Here’s an heretical thought: it is a symptom of a midlife crisis. Remember that eBay was one of the poster children of the original internet boom. Unlike most of its contemporaries, it was profitable almost from day one, has seen 10 years of explosive growth and now boasts 157 million users in 34 countries, with annual profits touching $1bn a year.

Now, this is great, but it can’t go on for ever. So if you were eBay’s management, sitting on a mountain of cash and nursing a buoyant share price, you’d be looking beyond the point where the auction business begins to plateau. You’d be looking for something with even bigger growth potential than online trading. Which would lead you to VoIP, the Next Big Thing…

The new arithmetic

Let’s see, now. Take the cost of rebuilding New Orleans and the three devastated states — say $200 billion. Add the cost of running that war over in Iraq — say $100 billion and rising. Call it $300 billion. Time to call a halt to tax cuts.

Not a bit of it.

Here’s Dubya’s latest word on the question:

On Friday, Bush ruled out raising taxes to pay the massive costs of Gulf Coast reconstruction, saying other government spending — which neither he nor his aides identified — must be cut to pay for a recovery effort expected to swell the budget deficit by $200 billion or more.

“You bet it’s going to cost money. But I’m confident we can handle it,” he said at a White House news conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Congress already has approved $62 billion for the disaster, but that is expected to run out next month and require another budget-busting installment. The federal deficit was projected at $333 billion for the current year before the storm slammed into the Gulf Coast more than two weeks ago. Some fiscal conservatives are expressing alarm at the prospect of massive additional federal outlays without talk of what other spending to cut.

The Seattle Times comments that

The proposed record reconstruction spending in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, estimated as high as $200 billion, is all but certain to add to a mushrooming national debt that already has the country dependent on foreign investors.

The sum is about equal to what has been spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It’s almost half the size of this year’s domestic discretionary spending, essentially everything the government does besides national defense, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

President Bush vowed yesterday to rebuild the tattered Gulf Coast, “whatever it costs.” He ruled out tax increases, which means the new spending will add to the burden on taxpayers from the federal budget deficit, now $331 billion, and the national debt, now $4.6 trillion.

“It means we’re going to have to make sure we cut unnecessary spending,” Bush said. “It’s going to mean that we maintain economic growth and we should not raise taxes.”

That Bush speech in New Orleans

Lovely column by Maureen Dowd…

In a ruined city – still largely without power, stinking with piles of garbage and still 40 percent submerged; where people are foraging in the miasma and muck for food, corpses and the sentimental detritus of their lives; and where unbearably sad stories continue to spill out about hordes of evacuees who lost their homes and patients who died in hospitals without either electricity or rescuers – isn’t it rather tasteless, not to mention a waste of energy, to haul in White House generators just to give the president a burnished skin tone and a prettified background?

The slick White House TV production team was trying to salvage W.’s “High Noon” snap with some snazzy Hollywood-style lighting – the same Reaganesque stagecraft they had provided when W. made a prime-time television address from Ellis Island on the first anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. On that occasion, Scott Sforza, a former ABC producer, and Bob DeServi, a former NBC cameraman and a lighting expert, rented three barges of giant Musco lights, the kind used for “Monday Night Football” and Rolling Stones concerts, floated them across New York Harbor and illuminated the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop for Mr. Bush.

Before the presidential address, Mr. DeServi was surveying his handiwork in Jackson Square, crowing to reporters about his cathedral: “Oh, it’s heated up. It’s going to print loud.”

A perfect day

This is my favourite kind of day. The thing about September is that such days seem suddenly very precious because you know that they’re about to become rare!

Like nephew, like uncle

Dubya’s nephew has been arrested after going on a drunken spree. Just like his uncle used to do, before he got religion and gave up the booze. Here’s the AP report:

AUSTIN, Texas — The youngest son of Florida Gov. Jeb Bush was arrested early Friday and charged with public intoxication and resisting arrest, law enforcement officials said.John Ellis Bush, 21, was arrested by agents of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission at 2:30 a.m. on a corner of Austin’s Sixth Street bar district, said commission spokesman Roger Wade.The nephew of President Bush was released on $2,500 bond for the resisting arrest charge, and on a personal recognizance bond for the public intoxication charge, officials said.

Don’t suppose this will stop the family running him for Governor of Texas, though.

An open source timeline for Katrina

The first tool for analysing any catastrophe is a detailed timeline. Given the complexity of the Katrina disaster (and the curious myopia of local and federal government), it seemed to me that it was a classic case for an open-source effort. Now Josh Marshall is creating something very like that on his Blog. Brilliant!

En passant, there’s a beautiful piece of Mac software for creating timelines.

What’s really going on in cyberspace?

One of the most interesting companies around is Cachelogic. They’ve developed some technology for doing deep analysis of the data traffic passing through ISPs’ servers. Last year, they revealed the extent to which P2P traffic has come to dominate the Net.

Now comes a new presentation by company co-founder Andrew Parker on “Peer-to-Peer in 2005”. It makes for riveting reading. Some highlights:

  • The 2004 study showed that BitTorrent was the biggest P2P service, and revealed a shift away from music sharing towards video. By the end of 2004, BitTorrent was accounting for as much as a third of all Internet traffic. But then came a legal crackdown on major BitTorrent sites, and the Supreme Court’s decision in the Grokster case.
  • The Supremes’ verdict, however, did not result in a rapid decline in P2P usage. In fact, at the end of 2004, P2P accounted for 60% of all Internet traffic. Parker says: “P2P outstrips every other communication and distribution protocol and is still growing”.
  • In many regions of the world, the traffic has shifted away from BitTorrent towards an alternative — eDonkey. And although BitTorrent traffic levels have been dramatically affected by the closure of the key tracker sites (which made it easy to find torrents), a fully-decentralised version of BT called eXeem is spreading.
  • 61% of P2P-shared files are video. Only 12% are audio.
  • Of the audio files, 65% are MP3 format, 23% are Windows media files — and a surprising 12% are in Ogg format.
  • Shared video is overwhelmingly (76%) in Windows media format (only 15% are MPEGs)
  • All of this is putting terrific pressure on ISPs. P2P is THE dominant protocol now, so ISPs cannot afford to block or restrict it. Furthermore, “P2P is driving consumer broadband uptake — and broadband is driving P2P uptake”.
  • P2P will become the distribution medium for most information goods. This will have significant downsides for ISPs — essentially relegating them to the role of mere conduits. The consumer relates directly to the service providing the content, not to the conduit.
  • Lots more. If you’re intrigued, it’s well worth viewing the whole presentation. Ed Felten has some interesting comments on all this.