Zero competition... so you are saying the wholesale process is truly competitive?
As i see it if the infrastructure isn't there then nobody gets the benefit of this arrangement.
If it is there but poor performing then it will be a poor performer regardless of provider.
Openreach / BT group are a highly profitable organisation who have spent Billions on sports rights alone recently, why did the tax payer have to fork out ~£2Bn , so far, to subsidise this?
The industry would of met the demand on its own, that is true competition , something the BDUK process has strived to destroy / marginalise with full EU backing.
Would you view other industries the same? a village with a single shop and/or pub , should the government subsidise competition there too? , Single track roads, should government subsidise replacing them with A roads ? After all the people in major towns have them.
As for companies going bust, take a look at how many small "wholesale" ISP's have gone to the wall over the years. The billing system for wholesale favours large organisations at the expense of the small providers.
BT retail are busy buying up sports rights and other stuff so they can provide something other wholesale providers cannot (not as cheap at least). Their monopoly on the database of all the phone lines/properties with them in the country means they can and do steal customers from other wholesale providers when people move home etc.
A typical conversation is
"I am moving house, i need to move/close my phone line.."
BT sales dept - certainly, we can set up your Broadband at your new address for you so it is ready for you. would you like us to do that?
then (insert arbritrary discount here) as incentive if the customer says they are using a different provider .
It is not a genuinely competitive process at all and once the infrastructure is entirely OR and LLU is all but a distant memory then the stranglehold will be complete.
Next you will be telling me that gas and electric is a genuine competitive marketplace
If the government had not interfered then the industry would of fed the market itself, competition would of been there and the potential of fixed wireless and Virgins cable investment for example would of encouraged BT to spend their profits, as they should, on upgrading their kit.
not OUR money from home and business tax payers.
And if the government hadn't interfered how many more complaints would there have been that areas weren't covered?
And if the suppliers didn't do wholesale then effectively it means there is a single ISP and therefore zero competition at any level. That would have been a recipe for disaster in my opinion. And what happens if that company then goes bust as happened to some of the previous wireless companies - the users then are left with no service whatsoever.
At least with a wholesale offering there is a level of competition with different offers from different ISPs.