Here’s a question that we don’t often ask: which is the U.S. more likely to accomplish – getting everyone health insurance, or broadband? Hint: it’s probably not what you think.
Credit: Cal Matters
The health insurance part of it is often debated. We passed ACA, but the number of uninsured stubbornly
remains at nearly 30 million, almost 10% of the population. Still, except for residents of those
12 states that have refused to pass Medicaid expansion, everyone in the
country has at least access to public or private health insurance, with
subsidies available to many.
Broadband hasn’t been around as long a health
insurance, but it has become an integral part of our society, as the pandemic
proved (ever try remote work or learning without broadband, much less telehealth?). Unfortunately,
some 20
million households lack broadband; assuming an average household size of about
2.5, that’s some 50 million people, which is way more than the number of
uninsured.
Welcome to the digital divide.
Everyone seems to agree increasing access to broadband
is a good goal. It’s part of President
Biden’s proposed
infrastructure plan, and even many Republicans support some funding towards
the goal, as in a recent
bipartisan proposal. Even Republicans support broadband spending
We often think about the issue as being a rural
problem, similar to the problem of electricity availability in rural areas before
the Rural
Electrification Act (1936). It’s
just hard, or at least expensive, to wire all those vast spaces, those farms
and small communities that comprise much of America.
The fact of the matter, though, is that of those 20
million households without broadband, some 15 million of
them are urban households. A higher percent
of rural households may lack broadband, but, in terms of actual numbers of households
lacking it, it is urban dwellers. For
the most part, broadband is available in their neighborhood; they just can’t
afford it (or don’t see the need).
But mostly we focus about the rural problem, for the wrong reasons. Blair Levin, a Brookings fellow, told The New York Times:
From an economic and society perspective, the most important thing to do is to get online everybody who wants to be online. From a political perspective, the biggest political capital is behind accelerating deployment where there is none, which means in rural areas.
The same article quoted
testimony from Joi Chaney, senior vice president at The Urban League, before
the House Appropriations Committee: “Our investments must not only solve for
the deployment or availability gap. They
must also solve for the adoption gap, the utilization gap and the economic
opportunity gap to truly achieve digital equity.”
As with health insurance, the problem is less access than it is affordability. Josh Stager, senior counsel at the Open Technology Institute, emphasized:
Once the pandemic started, it became painfully obvious that internet connectivity is a utility, and it's not just necessary to get through the pandemic but to get through modern life in America. And the reality -- that so many people are struggling with affording the service, not access -- became undeniable.
Brookings calls
it “digital poverty.” Others point
to “digital redlining,” which means you’re more likely to get fiberoptic or
other types of faster connections if you live in a wealthy suburb or a gentrified
urban neighborhood. Digital redlining.
Credit: Electronic Freedom Foundation
We don’t allow these kinds of disparities for electricity,
telephone service, or water, but we do for broadband -- and for health care. How very 1930’s of us.
As Brookings put it:
Digital poverty is akin to an entire neighborhood with spotty electricity or unreliable water service. These are places where students struggle to engage with digital coursework and adults can’t check online job boards. Digital poverty is a tangible drag on economic prosperity.
There are some subsidies available for broadband, most
notably the FCC’s Lifeline,
which pays a maximum of $9.25 monthly. An Open
Technology Institute analysis estimated the subsidies only cover 13% of the
actual broadband costs, while even the FCC acknowledges
that only 26% of eligible households participate.
I guess we should stop complaining about ACA
subsidies.
Broadband reminds me of healthcare in another way: Americans pay way too much for way too little. Our astronomical healthcare spending gets us only middling health care outcomes, but, by the same token, among OECD countries, only Mexico pays more for broadband. Our broadband speeds rank us at best tenth in the world; it’s one thing to be behind urbanized countries like Singapore or Hong Kong, but France or Hungary?
It’s all part of a pattern. It is true that rural hospitals have
been struggling, even closing, at alarming rates in recent years, but
so-called safety net hospitals, usually in urban areas, have
been hit hard as well. It is true
that many rural areas qualify as “food deserts,” but more
urban residents live in them, and that affordability is as least as
important as availability for food as well.
Ezra Klein wrote recently:
This is the conversation about poverty that we don’t like to have: We discuss the poor as a pity or a blight, but we rarely admit that America’s high rate of poverty is a policy choice, and there are reasons we choose it over and over again.
Whether it is poverty, broadband,
health care, food security, unemployment
benefits, wage inequalities, or a number of other hot issues, the root of our
problems usually lie not in poor personal choices but in policy choices – some with
unintended consequences but many with foreseeable outcomes.
ACA made a tactical
choice to put more money into our existing structures, such as expanding
Medicaid, and guaranteeing access to and subsidizing private insurance. There simply weren’t the votes to make more
dramatic changes (and still aren’t).
We may be making a
similar mistake with broadband. We may
choose to simply wire more areas that lack broadband, but without ensuring that
more people have the ability, and see the need, to pay for it. We should also be attacking our high cost of
broadband and forcing improvements in our speeds. As Brooking’s Tom Wheeler pointed
out, “it is foolhardy for the government to spend public
money for second class service.” He urged
that we “future-proof” broadband.
Even prior to the pandemic, some labeled broadband access
as a public health issue. Bauerly, et. Alia.,
called
broadband access a “super-determinant” of health, and warned: “digitally isolated communities may risk
worse health outcomes resulting from the effects of limited broadband access on
educational and economic opportunities as well as access to high-quality health
services.”
We can’t get the health care system, or health care
outcomes, that we want unless we also “future-proof” broadband.
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