The paper argues that the political circumstances leading up to Canadian Confederation resulted in a significant and lasting impact upon the institutional origins of Canada’s telecommunications market that persisted into the 21st century. It does so by first outlining the ideas and institutional dynamism that flowed from political rivalries in the lead-up to Confederation and coincided with the deployment of the telegraph. Second, the article discusses how commercial disputes created separate telegraph and telephone industries that embedded Canada’s unique telecommunications mosaic. The article concludes with a discussion of the importance of considering the local and regional imperative, and the legacies created by the original rationale, in developing national telecommunications policy. Canada’s approach sits somewhere between the private ownership model adopted by the United States and the public ownership model adopted in Australia. The major lesson from Canada is that, where diverse circumstances exist, addressing local and regional political imperatives can provide opportunities that might otherwise be overlooked by attempts to provide a standardised national solution in the delivery of telecommunications services to citizens.
2. Long-winded, foundational idea – help!
Canada's telecommunications strategy strikes a balance between the
privately owned model, akin to the United States, where private companies
deploy telecommunication services, and the publicly owned model, like
Australia, where the government regulates and ensures fair practices.
Canada's telecommunications policy development showcases that tailoring
strategies to regional political and cultural nuances during the deployment
of telecommunication networks does not necessitate compromising
outcomes. Instead, addressing local and regional political imperatives can
provide opportunities that may otherwise be overlooked by attempts to
provide a standardised national solution in the delivery of
telecommunications services to citizens.
3. Approach to this paper
• Submitted pending revisions
• Alyssa completing undergraduate internships at UC, moved from
EA to policy officer during internship!
• Original project looks at LEOs uptake and use in Australia
• Stalled by ethics and travel
• Changed project to my old PhD article that is not getting any
traction
• Alyssa’s fresh pair of eyes has been helpful, but we are now looking
at you, Josh!
4. • Canada’s success in telecommunication
services is demonstrated in its achievement
10th position on the OECD Broadband Portal
(December 2022)
• Canada’s telecommunications market was
influenced by various political circumstances
preceding Confederation
• Canada’s experience demonstrates that
diverse circumstances can uncover
opportunities to deliver telecommunications
services
5. The nationalisation of
telecommunications
• Canadian nation-building involved
federal interaction with provinces
through the railway, telegraph, and
newspaper sectors
• The Montreal Telegraph Company
established Canada’s first international
connection with the US
6. Limited government
intervention and
decentralisation
• Federal government’s powers over
telecommunications industries where
limited. This enabled businessmen to
play leading roles in establishing
networks
• By the 1880s, the impact of the federal
government’s vigorous policies were
“singularly slight and the prosperity so
confidently anticipated in 1867 had not
materialized “ (Maxwell, 1941)
8. The telephony industry
• A court decision ruled that Bell was the legal owner of the telephone patent, and
an agreement between Western Union and Bell was reached where Western
Union agreed (Casson, 1922, p. 83):
1. To admit that Bell was the original inventor.
2. To admit that his patents were valid.
3. To retire from the telephone business.
• The Bell Company, in return for this surrender, agreed –
1. To buy the Western Union telephone system [Edison’s device].
2. To pay the Western Union a royalty of twenty per cent on all telephone
rentals.
3. To keep out of the telegraph business.
9. Mosaic framework
• Party lines
• Municipal government ownership
• Build it or we will build it ourselves
• Different standards are OK
• Something is better than nothing
• Fast adoption and take-up manifesting in high levels of fixed line
broadband take-up, however…
• Low levels of mobile take-up…
12. The ‘mosaic’ as institutional concept?
• Historical work guided by Robert Babe (1990; 1996) but supplemented by
interviews in Canada in 2006-2007 and archival research
• Hughes (1993) recognised that local “cultural factors” determined
technology adoption in electricity
• However, ‘old school’ electricity networks are ‘dumb networks’
• Telecoms are ‘smart’ networks
• Canada’s take-up defies logic of other large countries like Australia
• BUT… Telecoms scholars ask “but what do you mean by mosaic?
13. References
Babe, R. E. (1990). Telecommunications in Canada: Technology, Industry, and Government.
Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Babe, R. E. (1996). Convergence and the New Technologies. In M. Dorland (Ed.), The Cultural
Industries in Canada: Problems, Policies and Prospects. James Lorimer.
Casson, H. M. (1922). The History of the Telephone. Chicago: A.C. McClurg.
Hughes, T.P. (1993). Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930. Baltimore,
MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Maxwell, J. A. (1941). Canadian Dominion-Provincial Relations. The Quarterly Journal of
Economics, 55(4), 584-610.
OECD (2022). Broadband Portal. URL: https://www.oecd.org/digital/broadband/broadband-
statistics/ (Accessed 1 February 2024).