| Participant | University | Vote | Confidence | Comment | Bio/Vote History |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daron Acemoglu
|
MIT | Uncertain | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
Alberto Alesina
|
Harvard | Agree | 2 | Bio/Vote History | |
Joseph Altonji
|
Yale | Agree | 6 |
High bandwidth traffic imposes externalities on other users. |
Bio/Vote History |
Alan Auerbach
|
Berkeley | Agree | 3 | Bio/Vote History | |
David Autor
|
MIT | Agree | 7 |
Net neutrality is a fiction. Hire Akamai (et al.) to mirror your servers worldwide to speed content to your users. One user: Healthcare.gov! -see background information here |
Bio/Vote History |
Katherine Baicker
|
Harvard | Agree | 2 | Bio/Vote History | |
Abhijit Banerjee
|
MIT | Uncertain | 1 |
I worry it will crowd out the public goods that make the internet uniquely valuable unless bandwidth gets so cheap that it doesn't matter. |
Bio/Vote History |
Marianne Bertrand
|
Chicago | Disagree | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
Markus Brunnermeier
|
Princeton | No Opinion |
This might lead to better allocation but also opens the room for price discrimination. The implications for the consumers are not obvious. |
Bio/Vote History | |
Raj Chetty
|
Stanford | Agree | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
Judith Chevalier
|
Yale | Uncertain | 10 |
Regs have to address vertical price squeeze motivated price discrimination.
|
Bio/Vote History |
Janet Currie
|
Princeton | Disagree | 5 |
The broadband industry does not seem to be very competitive, so allowing it to charge more to content providers may not improve the market. |
Bio/Vote History |
David Cutler
|
Harvard | Uncertain | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
Angus Deaton
|
Princeton | Agree | 7 | Bio/Vote History | |
Darrell Duffie
|
Stanford | Strongly Agree | 9 |
If all qualities sell at the same price, markets cannot allocate quality efficiently. Works for soap, wine, and haircuts; why not Internet? |
Bio/Vote History |
Aaron Edlin
|
Berkeley | Uncertain | 1 |
Faster service is valuable and this is one way we may get it but adverse effects are also possible. |
Bio/Vote History |
Barry Eichengreen
|
Berkeley | Uncertain | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
Liran Einav
|
Stanford | Disagree | 9 | Bio/Vote History | |
Ray Fair
|
Yale | Uncertain | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
Amy Finkelstein
|
MIT | Agree | 4 | Bio/Vote History | |
|
|
Yale | Agree | 6 | Bio/Vote History | |
Austan Goolsbee
|
Chicago | Uncertain | 8 |
did any else notice how slippery this hill we are camping on seems? |
Bio/Vote History |
Michael Greenstone
|
Chicago | Uncertain | 7 |
there is an obvious potential efficiency gain but there is also potential for a harmful "vertical price squeeze". net effect is unclear. |
Bio/Vote History |
|
|
Stanford | Uncertain | 7 |
This is a total side issue. The central issue is the perennial last-mile problem--the market power of the cable and phone companies. |
Bio/Vote History |
Oliver Hart
|
Harvard | Uncertain | 6 |
Letting price vary with quality is good if there is enough competition. I don't know if that's true here. If not the answer is less clear. |
Bio/Vote History |
Bengt Holmström
|
MIT | Agree | 6 | Bio/Vote History | |
Caroline Hoxby
|
Stanford | Strongly Agree | 10 |
Answer obvious on efficiency grounds. On distribution, use other means to redistribute to poor--not covert internet cross subsidization. |
Bio/Vote History |
Hilary Hoynes
|
Berkeley | Uncertain | 7 |
Clear gain to providing faster service at higher costs. Uncertain comes from potential GE effects in reducing access for those unable to pay |
Bio/Vote History |
Kenneth Judd
|
Stanford | Agree | 8 | Bio/Vote History | |
Steven Kaplan
|
Chicago | Uncertain | 9 | Bio/Vote History | |
Anil Kashyap
|
Chicago | Uncertain | 3 |
Presumably creates strong incentives for vertical integration. Not clear if that is good or not. |
Bio/Vote History |
Pete Klenow
|
Stanford | Agree | 1 | Bio/Vote History | |
Jonathan Levin
|
Stanford | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | ||
Eric Maskin
|
Harvard | No Opinion | Bio/Vote History | ||
|
|
Yale | Agree | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
Maurice Obstfeld
|
Berkeley | Uncertain | 3 | Bio/Vote History | |
Emmanuel Saez
|
Berkeley | Agree | 2 | Bio/Vote History | |
Larry Samuelson
|
Yale | Disagree | 5 |
This would be a great idea if the market for service provision was competitive, but is less obvious with our current market. |
Bio/Vote History |
José Scheinkman
|
Princeton | Uncertain | 5 |
In the absence of robust competition in broadband, regulation is needed to help new applications, services and content. |
Bio/Vote History |
|
|
MIT | Agree | 3 |
It is not generally good policy to restrict firms' product offerings, but there seem to be other considerations. |
Bio/Vote History |
Carl Shapiro
|
Berkeley | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | ||
Robert Shimer
|
Chicago | Agree | 3 |
Clearly winners and losers from this policy and clearly the market is imperfect. This is a hard call |
Bio/Vote History |
Nancy Stokey
|
Chicago | Agree | 5 | Bio/Vote History | |
Richard Thaler
|
Chicago | Agree | 1 |
Seems like those who cause congestion should pay more. I know some worry that ISPs will play favorites, but that should be preventable. |
Bio/Vote History |
Christopher Udry
|
Yale | Disagree | 6 |
Net neutrality has worked well, and likely maximizes welfare in the short-run. Longer-term investment incentives are the counter-argument. -see background information here |
Bio/Vote History |