Retail mobile and fixed network connectivity providers who sell directly to consumers arguably face some issues related to average revenue per account and cost per account. Whether in the mobile or fixed realms, mobile revenue per account seems to range from a few dollars a month up to $41 per month.
source: S&P Global Market Intelligence
Against that must be balanced the cost of infrastructure, operating and marketing costs plus all other overhead, ranging from personnel benefits to debt service and taxes. While not minor, network infrastructure costs are only part of the cost model.
Some have claimed 5G can reach break even in a five years or less. But that likely rests on excluding all other business costs except the network infrastructure. 5G capex per subscriber might range between $100 and $450 per year, during the network build period.
Even assuming a 20-percent profit margin, that still means 80 percent of revenue is consumed by operating costs, marketing, amortization of debt and other overhead, including personnel costs, retirement fund payments, dividend payments, taxes and so forth.
Looking at internet access prices using the purchasing power parity method, developed nation prices are around $35 to $40 a month. In absolute terms, developed nation prices are less than $30 a month.
That PPP normalization technique compares prices to gross national income per person. There are methodological issues when doing so, one can argue.
Gross national income is not household income, and per-capita measures might not always be the best way to compare prices, income or other metrics. But at a high level, measuring prices as a percentage of income provides some relative measure of affordability.
Generally speaking, broadband prices are dropping in developing countries, where the product is most expensive, and primarily because mobile internet access prices are dropping.
Looking at mobile voice and data prices, as a percentage of gross national income per person, one easily can see that very-high prices in lesser-developed countries skew global indices. In some developed markets, prices are less than one percent of GNI (without adjusting for purchasing power parity).
The unadjusted 2019 average price of a broadband internet access connection--globally--was $72..92, down $0.12 from 2017 levels, according to comparison site Cable. Other comparisons say the average global price for a fixed connection is $67 a month.
Looking at 95 countries globally with internet access speeds of at least 60 Mbps, U.S. prices were $62.74 a month, with the highest price being $100.42 in the United Arab Emirates and the lowest price being $4.88 in the Ukraine.
Another study by Deutsche Bank, looking at cities in a number of countries, with a modest 8 Mbps rate, found prices ranging between $50 to $52 a month.