Brought to you as a public service of the Open Spectrum Foundation (Stichting Open Spectrum), Amsterdam - Prague

openspectrum.info logo

NEWS

Ofcom estimate spectrum's economic value

From "Economic impact of spectrum use increases by half in 3 years," PublicTechnology.net, 29 November:

"Business activity that is largely dependent on the radio spectrum contributed £37bn, or 3%, to the UK's GDP in 2005/6, says Ofcom... [Moreover] businesses whose activity is largely dependent on spectrum employed 240,000 people in 2005/6, which is 0.8% of the total UK workforce.

"Spectrum is a finite natural resource that underpins broadcasting, fixed and wireless telecommunications as well as essential services such as defence, transport, the emergency services and healthcare. Consumers are demanding and using more wireless services; and communications companies are responding to that demand with new products and services.

"Increasing contribution to the economy

"Today's report also highlights the growing value that consumers and businesses derive from spectrum.

"As well as demonstrating the wider economic significance of commercial and civil radio spectrum use, the report contains a second calculation - the economic benefit from the use of spectrum to both producers and consumers.

"The report shows that in 2005/6 the economic benefit from the use of spectrum was £42bn; this is a 50% increase on 2002 which was £28bn (expressed in 2006 prices). The increase in the economic benefit from the use of spectrum was due to growth in mobile phone subscribers; the launch of new mobile data services, such as 3G; and the growth and availability of digital television and radio.

"The calculation of net economic benefit from the use of the radio spectrum is based on consumer and producer surplus. Consumer surplus is the value that consumers derive from the use of the spectrum. This is calculated by subtracting what people actually pay for a service from what they are prepared to pay. Producer surplus is calculated by subtracting the actual cost of producing a good or service from the revenue the company receives from the sale of the service (i.e. profit)."

Click here to download "Economic impact of the use of radio spectrum in UK" by Europe Economics, November 2006.

[ - 30 November 2006]

Click here for the LATEST HEADLINES

Recent News...

"Wi-Fi blossoms as teens desert TV for web" (30 November)

Huge growth in Russian WiFi hotspots (27 November)

Australia getting a national Bluetooth advertising network (27 November)

No "digital dividend" for license-free WLANs in the UK? (27 November)

Ukraine adding "general use" bands to allocation table (25 November)

Did Russia's top spectrum allocator resign? (23 November)

Ofcom legalizes micro FM transmitters, de-licenses CB (23 November)

Video-over-WiFi for village broadcasting in rural Mali (23 November)

"Smart Radio Challenge" finalists named (23 November)

First RSS/email/WiFi-enabled photo frame (21 November)

Ofcom says no to power boost for WLANs at 2.4GHz, but yes at 5.8GHz (21 November)

Performance artist "turns surveillance inside out" (21 November)

"Wi-Fi standards face patent threat" (21 November)

Smooth or bumpy, 802.11n transition begins next year (21 November)

US Air Force buys software-defined radios (21 November)

Solar-powered roadside RFID readers (20 November)

RFID just "the tip of the iceberg" (20 November)

Cellphone inventor talks about impact of new technology on spectrum (18 November)

First products certified, ZigBee now set for growth (18 November)

Wanted: your comments on US Government RFID policy (16 November)

Wireless recharging (16 November)

Ofcom bullish on Dynamic Spectrum Access (16 November)

Australia's 1st annual spectrum management conference set for December (16 November)

Japanese researchers use the 120 GHz band to transmit multiple uncompressed HDTV streams at 10 GBit/s (14 November)

Spectrum review in Malta (12 November)

Singapore teenager faces 3 years in jail for using neighbor's WiFi (11 November)

Global survey of unusual RFID applications (11 November)

Hospital uses UWB to track "patient flow" (10 November)

Mini-conference on spectrum policy and technology innovation (10 November)

FCC boosts unlicensed spectrum rights (3 November)

Growth in commercial Wi-Fi hotspots accelerating (2 November)

AMARC meeting to promote "community radio" in Arab countries (2 November)

License-free use of empty DTV channels? "Don't hold your breath." (2 November)

Complaints grow about micro-broadcast devices (1 November)

New group promotes "WirelessHD" video at 60GHz (31 October)

Wireless sensors kit: Internet-ready "out of the box" (30 October)

Hong Kong launches spectrum policy consultation (30 October)

"New Delhi's central business district to go wi-fi" (29 October)

Beware of WiMAX, a "telco technology in Internet garb"(28 October)

$3 billion for US hot-zones in the next 4 years (26 October)

85% of North American businesses will have WLANs by 2010 (25 October)

Shanghai: first citywide WiFi net in China (24 October)

New report on RFID credit-card vulnerabilities (24 October)

"Survey Shows Free Wi-Fi Increases Sales and Builds Customer Loyalty" (24 October)

"Comparing 802.11n and UWB for video applications" (20 October)

"EU calls for RFID privacy enhancements" (20 October)

Free WiFi for Qatar's parks (18 October)

Europe's agenda for expanding wireless "commons" (16 October)

RFID middleware: "poised to explode," soon to disappear, or seeking a new role? (14 October)

FCC votes to let low-power devices use empty TV channels after digital switchover (13 OctoberO

WiMedia Alliance promotes UWB in China (12 October)

"I have seen Wi-Fi's future, and it's free" (12 October)

TransSend: Bluetooth delivery of web items (12 October)

Singapore offering free WiFi "almost everywhere" (11 October)

IEEE approves low data-rate UWB spec (9 October)

First underwater radio modem goes into commercial production (9 October)

US patent for on-chip fractal antenna (5 October)

Reviving China's WAPI "war" against IEEE 802.11i (5 October)

Tablet PC + WiFi to replace medical charts and patient files (3 October)

Spectrum a hot topic at Telecom Policy Research Conference (3 October)

Nokia introduces "Wibree" technology as open industry initiative (3 October)

Bluetooth chip market "taking off" (1 October)

European Commission's RFID advisory group meets (1 October)

Visit our News Archive for additional stories.

To receive the openspectrum.info newsfeed by email, enter your email address:

(Email subscriptions managed by FeedBurner)