Reliable fiber broadband has the capacity to transform underserved communities across the country

When people talk about economic development in rural America, the conversation often turns to roads, bridges, and buildings. Those things matter. But there's an invisible piece of infrastructure quietly reshaping what's possible in small towns and farming communities from coast to coast: fiber broadband.
Access to reliable, high-speed fiber fundamentally changes the economic trajectory of the communities it serves. In 2024, the Center on Rural Innovation compared rural counties with high broadband adoption against those with limited access. The results were striking. Counties with high broadband adoption saw 44% higher GDP growth, 18% higher per capita income growth, and an incredible 213% higher business growth.
The impact of fiber optics
The economic case for fiber in rural areas goes well beyond download speeds. Think about what reliable broadband enables:
- Remote work: Professionals no longer have to choose between opportunity and community. Access to reliable fiber broadband means skilled workers in Rural America can now compete for jobs without having to commute to a major metro.
- Education: Learners with fast, dependable connections can earn degrees and certifications without relocating, access real-time tutoring and virtual classrooms, and tackle advanced coursework. That's not just convenience; it's generational opportunity.
- Health care: Telehealth has become a lifeline for rural patients who may live an hour or more from the nearest specialist. The Center for Telehealth and e-Health Law found that telehealth not only cut travel burdens dramatically but also reduced wait times by as much as 60% for rural patients, leading to a 20-30% growth in adoption.
- Agriculture: For farmers, the equation is equally compelling. Precision agriculture tools like GPS-guided tractors, drones, and IoT sensors rely on strong, low-latency connections. But per the USDA, only about half of U.S. farms utilize broadband access.
More than 22% of rural Americans still lack fixed broadband coverage, compared to under 2% in urban areas, the USDA states. And this disparity is even greater on Tribal Lands. That gap represents lost potential — students who fall behind, entrepreneurs who give up, patients who go without care. It's a problem we can solve, and we have the tools to do it.
Why it matters to Clearfield
Our mission has always been to enable the lifestyle that better broadband provides. Clearfield partners with community broadband providers — co-ops, municipal utilities, and local ISPs — to deploy scalable, cost-effective fiber infrastructure in the places that need it most. We design our solutions with those operators in mind: modular, connectorized, and built for efficient installation even in rural environments with smaller crews and greater distances.
But our stake in this extends beyond products and deployments. The BEAD program’s Buy America, Build America (BABA) compliance requirements have created an opportunity to bring fiber manufacturing jobs back to the U.S. BEAD has helped catalyze more than 1.3 million square feet of new or expanded manufacturing capacity across 28 states, according to the Fiber Broadband Association.
At Clearfield, we're proud to be part of that story. Every BABA-compliant product we make creates and sustains American manufacturing jobs. The time, effort, commitment, and training required cannot be understated. Neither can the value of what those jobs mean to the communities where they take root.
Connecting communities and creating jobs — that’s not simply good business. For those of us who have spent our careers in this industry, it's the whole point.
Ready to bring fiber to the communities you serve? Tell Clearfield how we can help.
Clearfield’s Chief Commercial Officer, Anis Khemakhem, is deeply passionate about technology, particularly in advancing fiber optics and telecommunications solutions. Throughout his career, he has consistently focused on leveraging cutting-edge technology to improve connectivity and enhance digital access across various sectors. His executive experience - including leadership positions at Clearfield, Amphenol and Carlisle Interconnect Technologies - demonstrates his executive engagement capabilities and capacity to handle complex, multi-stakeholder projects.