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U.S. telephone subscriber levels remain steady over 23 years, study shows

By Matthew Lasar
Created Oct 23 2006 - 9:23am

But income, region, and ethnicity make a difference in penetration rates

92.8 percent of all households in the United States had telephone service in March of 2006, according to a new FCC report. The data comes from the Current Population Survey completed by the Census Bureau in that month.

Similar data culled over the last two decades indicates that that percent has not changed much over time. In November of 1983, 91.4% of households had telephone service. The percentage of such households has never dropped below 90% and has sometimes risen as high as 95.5%.

But within that context, marked inequalities still exist between low income and higher income telephone users, further contrasted by ethnicity and region:

All told, 107.2 million households reported subscribing to telephone service in March of this year, but 8.4 million did not, a little over 7 percent of the U.S. population.



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