Letter to the Editor: Government Subsidy Too High for Broadband Extension
Today the Saint Louis Business Journal published a letter to the editor by John Payne and me (link added):
Editor:
The editorial board recently oversimplified our views on rural broadband access (“It’s a wired world, after all,” Aug. 20 issue). We do not oppose the proliferation of broadband into rural areas, merely the government subsidization of such expansion. Greater broadband penetration in rural areas indeed provides social benefits, but we remain skeptical that those benefits will outweigh cost of millions in taxpayer dollars.
Solutions for extending broadband exist in the private sector. I-Land Internet Services, for example, is expanding broadband into rural western Missouri at no cost to taxpayers. Fifty percent of people living in rural areas already have home broadband Internet service, according to a Pew Internet study released earlier this month. Furthermore, of the people who do not have high-speed Internet, only 6 percent cited a lack of access as the primary reason for not subscribing, compared with 48 percent who find the Internet irrelevant and 18 percent who have usability issues. Eighty million dollars is a very high cost to benefit such a small subset of people.
Christine Harbin, research analyst, Show-Me Institute
John Payne, research assistant, Show-Me Institute
Of additional note, contributors to Show-Me Daily have discussed this issue before.





“It’s a wired world, after all.” sounds like a cutting edge statement, but it’s really a narrow sighted observation.
Consider the proliferation of >> wireless << broadband internet access technology.
Although not new, tower to tower wireless internet is more competitive than ever. Speeds are comparable to DSL or cable internet and deployment options are virtually (no pun intended) unlimited. Just last spring, in a private / private partnership (remember those?) with a young entrepreneur's internet service company, we brought broadband service to a whole rural neighborhood for less then they were paying for dial-up access with a dedicated phone line.
We could set up over 10,000 100' towers like the one we built for less than the $85 million the taxpayers will have to ante up.
The governor's broadband initiative, like most mercantilistic project, will be a windfall for the well-connected at the expense of the taxpayer and the businesses too small to hire lawyers and lobbyists to belly up to the trough.
Comment by Ron Calzone — August 30, 2010 @ 12:13 p.m.