Policy No-Brainer: Extend The Affordable Connectivity Program For 5 Years With $30 Billion
Low wage and service sector workers, some 50 million Americans, were hit particularly hard by closures lock downs in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Fortunately, Congress and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) wisely instituted policies to help struggling families stay connected as everything turned virtual. Broadband was a lifesaver during Covid-19, enabling people to work, learn and receive healthcare online.
With a $14 billion appropriation from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) has enrolled more than 14 million households in a short period of time and may be the most effective broadband benefit program to date with its direct to consumer model. Eligible households can receive a discount of up to $30 per month toward internet service (up to $75 per month for eligible households on Tribal lands) and a one-time discount of up to $100 to purchase a tablet, laptop, or desktop computer. The innovative program offers a valuable policy learning opportunity as lawmakers consider sustainable long-term funding options to continue it.
Innovative Policy Design
Many features of the ACP reflect guidance from policy academics and researchers that supports a model that allows consumers more options. ACP recipients can choose the broadband plan of their choice and are not limited because of credit status or prior debt with the provider. Moreover, as the ACP is universally applicable, it allows for consumers to switching providers and plans, and does not charge recipients for early termination.
While the US has provided tens of billions of dollars to broadband providers to build networks, the presence of a high speed network alone does incentivize people to adopt. The ACP addresses the key issue of removing barriers to adoption by lowering the access price of broadband.
Policy scholars have long favored direct broadband vouchers to individuals over subsidies to companies. Rather than regulators picking winners, individuals and families choose the companies, technologies, and plans they prefer, thus creating competition in the broadband market. Voucher systems also reduce administrative and regulatory costs and capture.
A notable exception is California, where the Public Utilities Commission wants to penalize those who access the ACP by reducing available state benefits. Fortunately, other states have not followed California’s lead.
Make the benefit permanent before the money runs out.
There is broad bipartisan support for broadband support to low-income Americans, though the path through Congress is uncertain at this time.
Paul Garnett estimates that based on current trends, the ACP is likely to run out by mid-2024. Extending these trends, funding the ACP broadband benefit (but not devices) for an additional five years could cost $30-$35 billion.
Ideas for Sustainable Broadband Funding for Low-Income Americans
Empower the States
Garnett suggests that the most immediate path is for state broadband offices — using discretion granted to them under the infrastructure bill’s BEAD Program, as well as other federal funding programs — to extend ACP funding for eligible households in their states. Not every state will be able to extend the ACP’s duration or widen its eligibility, but that should not stop states that can close the ACP funding gap from doing so. States can gather the funding for proven programs.
Reform Universal Service Fund
Universal Service Fund (USF) reform is overdue. It has grown inefficient in overhead cost, and are built on unsustainable funding through fees on declining telephone landline services. The ACP could be funded through USF, albeit with a reformed program. USF provides some $9 billion annually to close the digital divide, deliver telehealth, support broadband infrastructure in rural areas, and reduce the cost of connectivity for low-income income Americans, schools, and libraries. However the program is predicted by to implode before the end of the decade because contributions are accessed on declining telephone subscriptions. The natural, logical solution is to fund the program with revenue from the services which benefit directly from connectivity, namely trillion-dollar internet companies Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft.
Various proposals have emerged in the U.S. and abroad including transit fees based on traffic levels and user bases, ad taxes, interconnection surcharges, and fair and proportional cost recovery from streaming video entertainment. Netflix, YouTube, Amazon Prime and Disney+ account for as much as 80 percent of internet traffic in the U.S. South Korea – the world’s leader for broadband access, use, and skills – has already implemented a successful program, while Japan, the nations of the European Union, and the International Telecommunications Union are exploring these options.
Importantly in the U.S, a diverse and wide-ranging group of commenters to the FCC, from free market think tanks to advocates in the social justice community, call for assessing the services offered by large technology companies in a fair and equitable manner. Notably this can be done as much of Big Tech’s revenue reflects business to business interactions and would not be passed on to consumers. Congress should continue to work aggressively to incorporate technology companies in the broadband funding mix.
Market solutions
The most efficient and most sustainable solutions incorporate the market in the product and service design. For example, internet services like search, social media, and peer to peer messaging like WhatsApp are made available without cost to consumers because they effectively have a built-in voucher/funding source: advertising. We should enjoy the same benefits with broadband service itself.
Consider the wildly popular free and zero-rated music, video and gaming services attempted by broadband providers in recent years. These programs created competition and offered incentives for people to try and switch broadband providers. Unfortunately, however, some of these early programs were throttled and ultimately ended by self-proclaimed broadband advocates. They claim that competitive, consumer-centric innovation which reduce a consumer’s financial outlay for broadband is “discriminatory.” However the real reason seems to be to limit broadband service innovation is to protect advertising dollars destined for big tech companies.
Outside the United States, Meta (earlier Facebook) partners with mobile operators in dozens of countries to offer Free Basics and Discover, providing zero-rated access to Facebook and connecting as many as 1 billion users to the internet for the first time. One policy innovation could be to promote this world-class engineering in the U.S. by designing a service which allows a free set of basic internet services available to all users while high cost, privately valuable services like streaming video entertainment would be covered separately.
Appropriations
A short term appropriation to provide a bridge to create time for Congress to pass a fiscally responsible and sustainable long term funding plan is the most likely path forward. More government spending at a time of runaway inflation and a growing national debt is rarely the answer, but spending on broadband to connect low-income Americans is a good investment, however it is funded.
Funding low-income Americans is one of the few social investments which can create financial benefits in improved health, greater education, more applications to jobs, and greater use of online government services, and reduced offline, in-person cost.
Originally published in Forbes.