Defining Objectives and Measuring Outcomes in the Emergency Broadband Benefit Program

Defining Objectives and Measuring Outcomes in the Emergency Broadband Benefit Program

The FCC seeks public comment on how to distribute $3.2 billion in the Emergency Broadband Connectivity Fund through the Emergency Broadband Benefit Program (“EBBP”). The Notice focuses mostly on questions related to the mechanics of how to distribute the funds, which is understandable given the importance of speed of implementing pandemic assistance. Our comments focus on ways the FCC might maximize the effectiveness of the funds and how we might learn from the EBBP to continue addressing the digital divide beyond the EBBP.

+ posts

Sarah Oh Lam is a Senior Fellow at the Technology Policy Institute. Oh completed her PhD in Economics from George Mason University, and holds a JD from GMU and a BS in Management Science and Engineering from Stanford University. She was previously the Operations and Research Director for the Information Economy Project at George Mason School of Law. She has also presented research at the 39th Telecommunications Policy Research Conference and has co-authored work published in the Northwestern Journal of Technology & Intellectual Property among other research projects. Her research interests include law and economics, regulatory analysis, and technology policy.

Scott Wallsten is President and Senior Fellow at the Technology Policy Institute and also a senior fellow at the Georgetown Center for Business and Public Policy. He is an economist with expertise in industrial organization and public policy, and his research focuses on competition, regulation, telecommunications, the economics of digitization, and technology policy. He was the economics director for the FCC's National Broadband Plan and has been a lecturer in Stanford University’s public policy program, director of communications policy studies and senior fellow at the Progress & Freedom Foundation, a senior fellow at the AEI – Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies and a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, an economist at The World Bank, a scholar at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and a staff economist at the U.S. President’s Council of Economic Advisers. He holds a PhD in economics from Stanford University.

Share This Article

View More Publications by

Recommended Reads

TPI Comments Warn FCC Space Licensing Reforms May Worsen Congestion Without Market Mechanisms

Press Releases

TPI Proposes Market-Based Auction to Consolidate Rural Carriers and Reduce USF Costs

Press Releases

Comments filed with the Federal Communications Commission in the Matter of Space Modernization for the 21st Century

Testimony and Filings

Explore More Topics

Antitrust and Competition 182
Artificial Intelligence 36
Big Data 21
Blockchain 29
Broadband 387
China 2
Content Moderation 15
Economics and Methods 37
Economics of Digitization 15
Evidence-Based Policy 18
Free Speech 20
Infrastructure 1
Innovation 2
Intellectual Property 56
Miscellaneous 334
Privacy and Security 137
Regulation 14
Trade 2
Uncategorized 4

Related Articles

Why Policy Experiments Never End: Constituencies Form Faster Than Evidence

CBRS in 2026: What Have We Learned? Panel Recap

Ambassador Steve Lang on WRC-27 and International Telecom Diplomacy

The Direct-to-Device Era: Panel Recap

2026 TPI Winter Spectrum Series: The Direct to Device Era

TPI Comments Warn FCC Space Licensing Reforms May Worsen Congestion Without Market Mechanisms

TPI Proposes Market-Based Auction to Consolidate Rural Carriers and Reduce USF Costs

Comments filed with the Federal Communications Commission in the Matter of Space Modernization for the 21st Century

Sign Up for Updates

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.