I'm not saying it would do any good. I'm just saying it's up to them, not the marketplace. Two different things.
Going back to my horse and buggy analogy; the government didn't decide that cars would replace horses on public roads, the marketplace did. The government involvement has been to provide roads and infrastructure for the general public to use their cars. The government became involved to satisfy the needs of the taxpayer.
So how would shutting down the AM band benefit either the government, or the taxpayers? Why not just let it fade into obscurity? That process is accelerating anyway.
That's a loaded question. "AM broadcasters as a group" doesn't exist. You have hundreds of owners who all have their own ideas.
And I argue that's part of the problem. The competitive nature of the radio business over decades has created these isolated silos of self-serving owners and groups. Nobody wants to come to the potential aid of a competitor, let alone join forces and lobby the government for something that they refuse to admit is in trouble. Sure, there have been technical collaboration to create new technical standards like color TV and HD Radio, but nothing so broad as to at least keep their foot in the door when times get tough, and the government may be able to help. When it comes to AM licensees, they're on their own in the middle of the ocean. Some with (FM translator) water wings purchased at Walmart.
You're talking about listeners, and I'm talking about owners. Removing ownership caps would make ownership easier.
But if a potential licensee owner can't get financing to purchase even a single AM station, how would it benefit them to buy every AM signal in a market? Let's say that the Commission removed all AM ownership caps. If you were a honcho at Hubbard, or iHeart, or Cumulus, would you recommend in a board meeting that the company spend reserve cash, or use their revolver to buy more AM stations? I mean, come on...
That's about it. Listeners have already made their decision, which is why radio companies are transtioning to streaming.
You're right, the smart ones are.
That's what the owners would want, or some kind of compensation for shutting down their business. That's what happens when the government makes a public-private partnership.
Talk about a one-sided partnership. Let's see, the taxpayers get to buy out beleaguered daytime AM stations because the licensee/owners were too slow, or too clueless to see that their world was closing in on them?