“…Panel A of Table 7 reports that the employment rate among job seekers with full coverage is 1.6 percentage points higher than the (counterfactual) employment rate of a job seeker with no coverage. While our results are statistically significant and consistent with previous research (e.g., Mansour, 2014 andGürtzgen et al , 2018), the impact corresponds to a relatively modest 2.5 percent increase relative to the dependent mean of 65.9 percent. Notes: This table displays estimation results of transition from unemployment in year t-1 to employment in year t or t+1 (panel A), starting monthly wage in new job following unemployment measured in 2014-USD (panel B), and tenure length in the first job measured in months (panel C) on broadband internet availability rate in year t-1, with t-1 ∈ [2000,2012].…”