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Comments of 71 Concerned Economists: Using Procurement Auctions to Allocate Broadband Stimulus Grants

Jonathan B. Baker, +77 more
- 13 Apr 2009 - 
- pp 1-22
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TLDR
In this article, the authors argue that procurement auctions are more efficient and more consistent with the stimulus goals of allocating funds quickly than a traditional grant review process and recommend that the National Telecommunications Information Agency (NTIA) and Rural Utilities Service (RUS) use procurement auctions to distribute at least part of the stimulus funds.
Abstract
The signatories to this document are economists who have studied telecommunications, auctions, and competition policy While we may disagree about the stimulus package, we believe that it is important to implement mechanisms that make stimulus spending as efficient as possible To that end, we have come together to encourage the National Telecommunications Information Agency (NTIA) and Rural Utilities Service (RUS) to adopt auction mechanisms to allocate broadband stimulus grants The broadband stimulus NOI asks which mechanisms NTIA and RUS should use to distribute grants and how those mechanisms address shortcomings in traditional grant and loan programs In this note we explain why procurement auctions are more efficient and more consistent with the stimulus goals of allocating funds quickly than a traditional grant review process We recommend that NTIA/RUS use procurement auctions to distribute at least part of the stimulus funds The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) requires NTIA/RUS to distribute $72 billion in broadband subsidies The broadband component of the Act has dual, and not entirely consistent, objectives of providing immediate economic stimulus and improving broadband service NTIA/RUS faces a formidable challenge in determining how to spend the money quickly and efficiently in ways that meet these goals The traditional grant application process is long, complicated, and involves subjective and arbitrary decisions regarding which projects to fund In other words, requesting and reviewing grant applications is not an effective way to implement the plan Procurement auctions, in contrast, provide a mechanism that can allocate grant money quickly, efficiently, and according to well-defined rules As a result, procurement auctions offer NTIA/RUS the most promising method of maximizing broadband improvement while also creating some level of “temporary, timely, and targeted” stimulus We therefore strongly recommend that NTIA/RUS adopt procurement auctions as its preferred method of distributing grants This memo has three parts First, it explains why the traditional grant application process is unsuitable for this task and why procurement auctions are better suited Second, it sketches out a procurement auction plan This plan is intended to be a starting point from which auction design experts would proceed to build and implement a fully functional auction Finally, we explain that even if policymakers are skeptical of procurement auctions, one could be implemented quickly as part of an initial tranche of stimulus funding in order to test its efficacy relative to traditional approaches This approach would allow NTIA/RUS to quickly expand upon or modify the procurement auction program in subsequent funding rounds

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