If you're old enough to remember a time before cellphones, you likely have a general appreciation of the transformative role that mobile connectivity has played in American life. But have you ever tried to express that impact in economic terms? A July 29 study, prepared by CTIA — The Wireless Association and Recon Analytics, does just that. And the takeaways are impressive.
"The 4G Decade: Quantifying the Benefits," as its name suggests, details the impact of 4G wireless technology on investment, Gross Domestic Product (GDP), jobs, and consumer welfare during the ten-year period that began in 2010. One data point, in particular, drives home the overarching theme: based upon contributions to GDP ($690.5 billion in 2019 alone), were the U.S. wireless industry its own country, it would rank as the 21st largest economy in the world.
Some additional conclusions worth noting:
On the topic of 5G's potential economic impact, James E. Prieger, Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the Pepperdine University School of Public Policy and a Member of the Free State Foundation's Board of Academic Advisors, recently weighed in. In a June 1 Perspectives from FSF Scholars, "An Economic Analysis of 5G Wireless Deployment: Impact on the U.S. and Local Economies," he concluded that:
- Wireless providers invested $261 billion in 4G networks over the last ten years;
- During that same timeframe, wireless GDP grew by 253 percent — and was responsible for nearly 10 percent of the total increase in U.S. GDP;
- 4G networks support 20 million American jobs — one out of every six — making wireless the top industry in terms of job contribution; and
- Prices have dropped significantly, saving consumers $130 billion annually. The same unlimited plan that cost on average $114 in 2010 today can be purchased for just $65 — while speeds, coverage, and device capabilities all have improved substantially.
On the topic of 5G's potential economic impact, James E. Prieger, Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the Pepperdine University School of Public Policy and a Member of the Free State Foundation's Board of Academic Advisors, recently weighed in. In a June 1 Perspectives from FSF Scholars, "An Economic Analysis of 5G Wireless Deployment: Impact on the U.S. and Local Economies," he concluded that:
8.5 million jobs will be created over 2019-2025 compared to a counterfactual 4G-only world, with an average of 1.2 million new jobs each year. The workers filling these new jobs will earn more than $560 billion during that time, create $1.7 trillion in additional output, and add over $900 billion to U.S. GDP.