Signs of digital distress: Mapping Broadband Availability and Subscription in American Neighborhoods

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The internet is now a fundamental component of the American economy, creating new ways to educate, employ, bring services to, and entertain every person. Broadband, especially wireline broadband in American homes, is the essential infrastructure for unlocking the internet’s economic benefits. However, broadband infrastructure is far from ubiquitous, both in terms of where it operates and who subscribes to it, and those deficits are not shared evenly across the country. As such, policymakers must understand how the national digital divide varies depending on the place.

The following research assesses both components of the digital divide, and for the first time studies them in every American metropolitan area and neighborhood. Identifying local gaps—and not just in where telecommunications infrastructure goes, but also who subscribes to it—more comprehensively portrays the extent of digital disconnect.


Signs of digital distress: Mapping Broadband Availability and Subscription in American Neighborhoods Signs of Digital Distress (Report PDF) Brookings looks at broadband access and use – rural areas are falling behind! (Blandin Foundation)