Distinguishing Bandwidth and Latency in Households’ Willingness-to-Pay for Broadband Internet Speed

49 Pages Posted: 30 Mar 2017 Last revised: 2 May 2018

See all articles by Yu-Hsin Liu

Yu-Hsin Liu

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Jeffrey Prince

Kelley School of Business, Indiana University

Scott Wallsten

Technology Policy Institute

Date Written: April 2018

Abstract

We measure households’ willingness-to-pay for changes in key home broadband Internet connection features using data from two nationally administered, discrete choice surveys. Both surveys include price, data caps, and download and upload bandwidth, but only one includes latency. Together, these surveys allow us to measure tradeoffs between bandwidth and other connectivity features such as price and data caps, and perhaps most notably, provide the only empirical evidence to date of tradeoffs between bandwidth and latency. We find that households’ valuation of bandwidth is highly concave, with relatively little added value beyond 100 Mbps. For example, households are willing to pay about $2.34 per Mbps ($14 total) monthly to increase bandwidth from 4 Mbps to 10 Mbps, $1.57 per Mbps ($24) to increase from 10 to 25 Mbps, and only $0.02 per Mbps ($19) for an increase from 100 Mbps to 1000 Mbps. We also find households willing to pay about $8.66 per month to reduce latency from levels obtained with satellite Internet service to levels more common to wired service. Household valuation of increased data caps is also concave as caps increase from 300 GB to 1000 GB, although consumers place a significant premium on unlimited service. Our findings provide the first relative valuation of bandwidth and latency and suggest that current U.S. policy may be over-penalizing latency relative to reductions in bandwidth and data caps. For example, we find that in its CAF Phase II Auction, the FCC is imposing a bidding penalty for latency that is about five times higher than what our WTP estimates suggest it should be relative to bandwidth offered.

Keywords: Bandwidth, Latency, Choice Experiment, Universal Service, Data Caps

Suggested Citation

Liu, Yu-Hsin and Prince, Jeffrey and Wallsten, Scott, Distinguishing Bandwidth and Latency in Households’ Willingness-to-Pay for Broadband Internet Speed (April 2018). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2942236 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2942236

Yu-Hsin Liu (Contact Author)

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Jeffrey Prince

Kelley School of Business, Indiana University ( email )

1309 E. Tenth Street
Kelley School of Business
Bloomington, IN 47405
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8128562692 (Phone)
47405 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://https://kelley.iu.edu/jeffprin/

Scott Wallsten

Technology Policy Institute ( email )

409 12th St., SW
Ste 700
Washington, DC 20024
United States
2027309441 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.wallsten.net

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