726 words The Freeman page 1 of 3 Foundation for Economic Education Irvington-on-Hudson, New York 10533 (914) 591-7230 High-Definition TV: Government or Market Choice? by Gary McGath High-definition television (HDTV) promises to be the biggest breakthrough in video broadcasting since color. It will offer wider pictures with much more detail and clarity; watching TV will be almost like seeing a movie in a theater. The technology for HDTV exists today, and it is even in operation in Japan. Unfortunately, there isn't an industry standard for American HDTV. In accordance with conventional wisdom on broadcasting, the Federal Communications Commission has to approve a standard. There is no shortage of ideas -- the FCC has about 20 proposals under consideration. The problem is one of trade-offs between the higher quality offered by HDTV and compatibility with the existing National Television System Committee (NTSC) technical standards adopted by the FCC in 1941. A TV channel occupies a certain band-width, a "space" in the spectrum of broadcast frequencies. If HDTV signals could occupy more than one channel's band-width, the task of sending a high-quality picture would be easier; but then fewer stations could operate in a given geographic area without interfering with one another. Ideally, a broadcast signal would occupy the same band-width as an existing TV channel, would be received by existing TV sets, and would contain extra information that the new HDTV sets could receive. But whether it's possible to meet the technological limitations and provide full compatibility with existing TV is a hotly debated question. The proposals before the FCC will put an initial premium of $500 to $1,500 on an HDTV set compared to a conventional set, even though studies have indicated that most people who are shown both images don't consider the improvement worth more than $100. The costs of new technologies decrease with time only if they find a market to begin with. The new broadcasting equipment for HDTV also will be expensive; a large potential audience will be needed to justify its cost. Government approval of a standard doesn't automatically lead to market success, as is illustrated by the FCC's early experience with color television. In 1950, the FCC approved the CBS system for color TV, which involved a color wheel rotating in synchronization with successive frames of the picture. Not only was this method incompatible with existing black-and-white sets, but it also added a major mechanical component to the TV sets of the day. Because the CBS system was a commercial failure, the FCC reversed itself in 1953 and approved RCA's system, which is the one used today. There are currently about 20 major television manufacturers in the United States; of these, Zenith is the only one that is domestically owned. Not surprisingly, Zenith's proposal is one of the leading candidates -- perhaps because it really is one of the best, though it's hard to avoid the impression that its political position plays a major role. The ideal implicit in the FCC's approach is a single standard that would serve the country for the next 30 years or so. Fixed standards offer some significant economic advantages: people don't have to replace obsolete equipment or get multiple sets to receive incompatible formats. The equipment, however, becomes obsolete, and nothing can replace it. Today's National Television System Committee broadcasting standard is in fact ancient technology, established in the early days of television. If computers had suffered the same fate, we'd still be using room-sized machines with less power than today's five-pound portables. What path might HDTV follow, if it were left to the choices of the market? Its first appearance wouldn't be on the broadcast market, but on a market like cable where there is a greater emphasis on quality and a closer link between the viewer and the broadcaster. Viewers could be guaranteed a full schedule of HDTV programming, and could be directly billed for premium-quality broadcasting. We could expect to see cable companies offer discounts for advance subscriptions, enabling them to raise capital, and to determine whether the market really is there. A non-broadcast path to HDTV could open up remarkable possibilities. Fairly soon, fiber optics may replace metal wire for non-broadcast communications. If this happens, tremendous amounts of band-width will be available, and true digital television would become possible. Finding band-width for signals sent over the airwaves would become as obsolete an exercise as finding a hitching post. But if the FCC holds non-broadcast TV back to the level of the broadcast medium, this won't happen. ___________________________________________________________ Mr. McGath is a software consultant in Hollis, New Hampshire. This article is adapted from the October 1989 issue of The Freeman, published by The Foundation for Economic Education, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York.