The Liftoff of Consumer Benefits from the Broadband Revolution
Author(s): Dutz, Mark A; Orszag, Jonathan M; Willig, Robert D
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Abstract: | This paper uses both a discrete choice demand model and a direct survey method to derive robust measures of the contribution of home broadband to consumer welfare during the early years of broadband adoption by U.S. households. We estimate a demand system that distinguishes between cable, DSL, satellite and fiber broadband versus dial-up Internet services. We allow household preferences for Internet services to vary depending on the share of rural households in each geographic market, and find a significant impact of rural geography on demand. The estimated own-price elasticity of demand for broadband declines over time from -1.5 in 2005 to -0.7 in 2008. Consumer surplus from Internet is found to concentrate in broadband services, with the net consumer benefits from home broadband in 2008 on the order of $32 billion per year. |
Publication Date: | 12-Jan-2012 |
Citation: | Dutz, Mark A, Orszag, Jonathan M, Willig, Robert D. (2012). The Liftoff of Consumer Benefits from the Broadband Revolution. Review of Network Economics, 11 (4), 10.1515/1446-9022.1355 |
DOI: | doi:10.1515/1446-9022.1355 |
EISSN: | 1446-9022 |
Pages: | 1 - 34 |
Type of Material: | Journal Article |
Journal/Proceeding Title: | Review of Network Economics |
Version: | Final published version. Article is made available in OAR by the publisher's permission or policy. |
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