New Research Shows that Improving Mobile Internet Service Can Reduce Digital Inequality

Over 90% of the U.S. population has internet access. 

However, many households, particularly those of low socioeconomic status, are 鈥渟martphone-dependent,鈥 meaning they rely purely on their smartphone for internet access. As a result, their connection may be unstable or slow, and they may be constrained by data caps that limit how much they can use the internet. This puts them at a disadvantage compared to households with internet access through smartphones and other broadband connections at home and work, perpetuating digital inequality between disadvantaged and advantaged households. 

The smartphone dependence of many disadvantaged households begs the question: If mobile internet service was better 鈥 e.g. if it was faster, more reliable, and/or didn鈥檛 come with data constraints 鈥 could that reduce digital inequality and level the playing field? Researchers from the 色花堂 Scheller College of Business and Southern Methodist University Cox School of Business studied this question and found the answer is 鈥測es.鈥

, assistant professor of IT and Operations Management at the Cox School of Business and 色花堂 Ph.D. graduate, led the project. 鈥淚 was interested in the effect of data caps. For example, when you have 10GB of data per month and use more, you are charged extra, or your connection is throttled,鈥 said Kannan. 鈥淪o, I partnered with a large telecommunications provider to study what happens when their subscribers switched from capped to unlimited data plans. I was particularly interested in differences between high-income and low-income households.鈥

Kannan, along with , Catherine and Edwin Wahlen Professor of Information Technology Management, and , Gregory J. Owens Professor of Information Technology Management, at the Scheller College of Business, found that while all households increased their data use after switching to an unlimited plan, the increase was significantly larger for families of low socioeconomic status.

鈥淭hat was our initial finding: that improving mobile internet service by removing the data cap had disproportionately large benefits for disadvantaged households,鈥 said Overby. 鈥淏ut that didn鈥檛 mean much in and of itself. If those households weren鈥檛 using the additional data for 鈥榚nriching鈥 purposes like accessing educational, health care, or career-related data, the additional data consumption wouldn鈥檛 translate into positive social benefits. Indeed, years of research on digital inequality have consistently shown a 鈥榰sage gap鈥 in which advantaged households take fuller advantage of internet access improvements than disadvantaged households. The result is that internet improvements often exacerbate inequality. So, we dug deeper.鈥

Specifically, the researchers leveraged the telecommunication provider鈥檚 data categorization system to study changes in the consumption of educational data. They found that disadvantaged households experienced disproportionate increases in education data consumption (as well as in overall data consumption) after switching to unlimited mobile data. Although advantaged households increased their education data consumption by approximately 15MB (or about three digital textbooks) per month after switching to unlimited data, disadvantaged households increased their education data consumption by approximately 24MB (or about five digital textbooks) per month.

 鈥淲e can鈥檛 be sure that these disproportionate increases in education data consumption will help disadvantaged households narrow gaps in educational outcomes. However, this is clearly a step in the right direction,鈥 said Kannan. 

 The research is directly relevant to the Federal Communications Commission鈥檚 2023 inquiry into the effects of data caps on disadvantaged households. Narasimhan explains, 鈥淟et鈥檚 say that based on their inquiry, the FCC decides to limit the use of data caps. A logical question is: will that do any good? In other words, will disadvantaged households take advantage of their improved mobile internet service in a way that can reduce digital inequality? Prior to our research, we didn鈥檛 really know. But based on our research, the answer is yes.鈥

 The research paper is forthcoming in Management Science and available at .