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funchords
Hello
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join:2001-03-11
Yarmouth Port, MA
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reply to pnh102

Re: Consider the Converse

said by pnh102:

said by MightyPez:

This doesn't make sense to me. Are you saying that since broadband expanded during these times, the net job gains for this one industry would create more jobs than all the other industries lost?
No. I am simply saying there is no causal relationship between broadband deployment and job growth.
There are construction costs, that's causal. But after that, there are the after-effects. In an area that has broadband, tech jobs can live and tech-enabled businesses can get advantage. The area is more attractive to live and work in, thus there is an economic advantage over those areas without broadband. Two-thirds of Americans subscribe to broadband, and it's now a huge incentive next to "good schools" and "low taxes."

Work and life is easier with the Internet. It's crazy to think that doesn't translate into jobs.

Headlines:
US House Blocks Internet Taxes for 4 More Years, as Private Studies Prove Web Commerce Driving US Economy »www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_p···testnews
More Internet Equals More Jobs: Reviving the Economy with Broadband »www.thewip.net/contributors/2009···obs.html

And the guys that came up with that statistic that one percent of additional deployment creates 300,000 jobs, recently said this:
We last examined the economic impact of broadband on the economy and on employment in 2001 and 2003. As it turns out, many of our previous predictions were too pessimistic. We underestimated the growth of broadband -- its reach, the applications that it made possible, and the reductions in price of access in the first decade of the 21st century. The increasing availability, improved speed, and lower price of high-speed Internet services that has resulted from the continuing massive investment in broadband infrastructure has had a predictable effect on household subscriptions. The Pew organization’s household surveys show that the share of households subscribing to broadband Internet services has risen from 47 percent in 2007 to nearly 65 percent at the end of 2009, substantially above our 2003 estimate.

The indirect benefits of broadband are perhaps even more significant: Smart young programmers creating new “apps” for smartphones; academic institutions utilizing ever faster broadband to enhance the educational experience; health care personnel being able to deliver world-class medical services to underserved regions domestically and globally; and, businesses being able to order, manufacture, market and distribute their products from anywhere to anywhere. We could not have anticipated many of these developments in 2003; we surely cannot foresee all of the benefits of continuing improvements in broadband services that will occur in the next few years as network companies continue to upgrade their infrastructure.
(and these guys aren't necessarily friendly to some of the line-sharing or structural separation ideas that some NN-folk like, but they recognize that broadband means jobs.)
--
Robb Topolski -= funchords.com =- District of Columbia -- KJ7RL
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