The news: A national high-speed internet initiative providing universal, reliable internet may add $160 billion per year to the US economy, according to a new study conducted by The Aspen Economic Strategy Group (AESG), per Bloomberg.
Why this matters: The study is one of the clearest attempts yet to assign a dollar value to expanded internet access. In the past, researchers have struggled to pin down these economic benefits, due in part to methodological issues with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) data, which critics say undercounts the number of residents who lack broadband access.
The problem: The FCC estimates that some 18 million US residents still lack physical access to broadband, though that figure is likely much higher.
The bigger picture: Expanding internet access is a major component of President Biden’s proposed $1.2 billion infrastructure bill, which would set aside $65 billion for investments in broadband nationwide.
Will it work? Additional reports highlighting the economic benefits of expanded broadband access will likely increase support for spending efforts that have already gained some bipartisan support in Congress. The pronounced impact on rural areas—often under Republican governance—could also help drive support for the spending initiatives.
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