Litcius/Paper detail

The Impacts of the Lifeline Subsidy on High-Speed Internet Access

Samara Mendez, Gábor Molnár, Scott J. Savage

2021The Journal of Law and Economics10 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper evaluates the impacts of the Lifeline subsidy on high-speed Internet prices, demand, and welfare. Results show that low-income households would require large price reductions to subscribe to basic broadband. Simulations of competition between cable and telephone firms show that the $9.25 subsidy lowers the prices for low-quality plans and incentivizes about 6 percent of low-income households to take up high-speed Internet. When firms price discriminate by charging different prices to low- and high-income households choosing the same plan, about 25 percent of low-income households enter the market and consume high-speed Internet. When the social planner sets prices and price discriminates, 68 percent of low-income households enter the market, and more higher-speed plans are consumed.

Topics & Concepts

SubsidyThe InternetCompetition (biology)Internet accessWelfareBusinessBroadbandLow incomeQuality (philosophy)EconomicsLabour economicsDemographic economicsTelecommunicationsMarket economyComputer sciencePhilosophyWorld Wide WebEpistemologyEcologyBiologyICT Impact and PoliciesConsumer Market Behavior and PricingDigital Platforms and Economics