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Study shows US has slower LTE wireless than 60 other countries
America’s LTE wireless is a lot slower than many other countries. Source: PXHere
America’s LTE wireless is a lot slower than many other countries. Source: PXHere

You can say a lot of things about the state of LTE wireless broadband around the world, but you definitely can’t describe it as “America first.” A new survey by OpenSignal shows that the U.S. lags other countries in LTE speeds and availability—and is farther behind than it was in OpenSignal’s previous report.

So President Donald Trump probably won’t tweet out these findings. But on the upside, this London firm’s research does show improvement in the States. And things may get better over the next year or so, thanks to two developments unique to America.

Saturation before speed

OpenSignal’s report looks at 50 billion measurements taken by its app running on 3.8 million mobile devices in 77 countries from July 1 through Oct. 1. Those findings prioritize “availability”: How often does a phone get an LTE (Long Term Evolution, also often called 4G) signal?

Even slow LTE downloads—say, 6 megabits per second—beat 3G service that typically can’t get past 3 megabits per second, what old phone-based DSL residential broadband can manage. So OpenSignal’s LTE metric isn’t an unfair one.

On that, the U.S. can take a fair measure of pride in having reached 86.94% availability, good for fifth place after South Korea (96.69%), Japan (94.11%), Norway (88.66%), and Hong Kong (87.23%).

Availability doesn’t mean coverage—if an area has a lousy LTE signal but phone users know that and avoid it, the coverage gap won’t show up in this metric. But it’s not divorced from geography either, and the U.S. doing this well when it’s vastly larger than the top four countries is worth noting.

But in the last such OpenSignal report, the U.S. ranked fourth. Then as now, our closest neighbors were a good deal behind: Canada had 81.1% availability and Mexico had 69% availability, compared to 79.52% and 73.5% in the current data.

Downloads trending up, just not as much here

American exceptionalism, however, takes a beating in OpenSignal’s findings about LTE download speeds. They have the U.S. in 61st place, at 13.98 Mbps, far below the top three of Singapore (46.64 Mbps), South Korea (45.85 Mbps) and Norway (42.03 Mbps).

That’s also worse than Canada’s 29.79 Mbps and Mexico’s 22.03 Mbps—and it’s slightly slower than OpenSignal’s prior finding for U.S. LTE downloads, 14.99 Mbps.

In an earlier, U.S.-only study, OpenSignal found slower speeds at the two largest carriers, AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ), which it suggested were the fault of both carriers’ unlimited-data plans encouraging more intensive phone use.

(Verizon’s media division, Oath, includes Yahoo Finance.)