Donald Trump’s ascension to the White House had very little to do with his views on the spread of high-speed broadband, wireless spectrum allocation — or any number of other eye-glazing but important issues impacting technology in the country he will soon lead. Granted, there was no public thirst for a heated, televised debate over how to keep next-generation 5G wireless devices from overwhelming older networks. Yet these and other tech-related topics are closely connected with much of the rhetoric that ultimately won Trump the presidency.
Some expect Trump’s opposition to immigration will have a ripple effect through the tech industry. He plans to scale back the H-1B visa program — which is critical to many high-tech companies finding the talent needed to develop products and services that today exist only in some entrepreneur’s imagination. As a candidate Trump also attacked many taxation and trade policies that have encouraged tech companies to outsource production overseas. Although short on details, he promised several times over the past year and a half to bring manufacturing jobs back to the United States.
Scientific American spoke with Robert Atkinson, president of the non-partisan think tank Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF), to better understand where Trump stands on technology and innovation policy. An edited transcript of the interview follows.
What are the most pressing tech-related issues for the Trump administration?
After he appoints a new Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman, the first thing on the docket will be to repeal FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s Open Internet Order, also known as net neutrality. The second will be to repeal Wheeler’s Internet Service Provider privacy rules, which limit how ISPs can use and sell customer data. I don’t think the new administration will feel a sense of urgency beyond that, because tech is not going to be a top priority.
How will the Trump administration’s other priorities influence (or be influenced by) technology?
Three of Trump’s top priorities for 2017 are related to tech. Trump has said his administration will build new infrastructure that’s going to be the best in the world. You cannot have the world’s best infrastructure unless it is infused with technology, whether that’s cutting-edge construction materials or sensors that connect to the Internet of Things. The second thing: He cannot be a successful president — as he has defined success — if he’s not a lot tougher on trade restrictions, and that will affect the tech industry potentially in a very positive way if he does it right. The tech industry is subject to an array of unfair and harmful trade practices. Trump says he’s going to do something about that.
The third area is taxes — more specifically, whether the Trump administration jettisons research and development tax credits in favor of a lower tax rate as they reform the corporate tax structure. If you get rid of the R&D tax credit, you can lower the rate one percentage point. Or do they expand the R&D tax credit and put in place what’s called an innovation box — a special, lower tax rate for income derived from intellectual property that Sen. Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) has supported?
Who’s on the short list to potentially replace Wheeler as FCC chairman?
Jeff Eisenach is the name that’s been most talked about. He has been leading the Trump campaign in telecom and tech issues, and may be leading Trump’s transition team in that area. Jeff, who is on ITIF’s board, has a longtime conservative pedigree. He ran a think tank that was affiliated with Newt Gingrich back in the 1990s and he worked in the first Bush administration. More recently he’s been at the American Enterprise Institute, which is a center-right conservative group. I think there’s a chance that Jeff could head up the FCC. He would be a strong appointment; he knows the issues very well.
How might Eisenach’s appointment impact FCC policy?
If it is Jeff, then broadband access will no longer be classified as a Title II service that’s subject to a wider range of rules and is much easier to regulate. Instead, it will once again be considered a Title I service, making it harder for the government to get legal approval to do price or privacy regulations. With Jeff, you’d also see a push for ending what we might call government overbuilding, such as federal grants for local communities that have access to commercial broadband but decide it’s not fast enough and want to build another network on top of or alongside it. And you’d see a big push for freeing up space on the radio spectrum to pave the way for a transition to 5G next-generation networks.
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