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Entry Threat, Entry Delay, and Internet Speed: The Timing of the U.S. Broadband Rollout

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  • Wilson, Kyle
  • Xiao, Mo
  • Orazem, Peter F.

Abstract

In a rapidly growing industry, potential entrants strategically choose which local markets to enter. Facing the threat of additional entrants, a potential entrant may lower its expectation of future profits and delay entry into a local market, or it may accelerate entry due to preemptive motives. Using the evolution of local market structures of broadband Internet service providers from 1999 to 2007, we find that the former effect dominates the latter after allowing for spatial correlation across markets and accounting for endogenenous market structure. On average, it takes two years longer for threatened markets to receive their first broadband entrant. Moreover, this entry delay has long-run negative implications for the divergence of the U.S. broadband infrastructure: one year of entry delay translates into an 11% decrease in average present-day download speeds.

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  • Wilson, Kyle & Xiao, Mo & Orazem, Peter F., 2020. "Entry Threat, Entry Delay, and Internet Speed: The Timing of the U.S. Broadband Rollout," ISU General Staff Papers 202010270700001120, Iowa State University, Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:isu:genstf:202010270700001120
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    Cited by:

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    2. Chen, Yulong & Ma, Liyuan & Orazem, Peter F., 2023. "The heterogeneous role of broadband access on establishment entry and exit by sector and urban and rural markets," Telecommunications Policy, Elsevier, vol. 47(3).

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