Surprise, surprise: U.S. broadband is slow. Really slow.
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A file that takes four minutes to download in South Korea would take nearly an hour and a half to download in the U.S. using the average bandwidth. Japanese users leaves U.S. users behind with an eye-popping 63.60 Mb/s download link. This means that Japanese can download an entire movie in just two minutes, as opposed to two hours or more here in the U.S. Just in case you are wondering: No, Japanese users do not pay more for their broadband connections. In fact, U.S. broadband cost is among the highest in the world.
Japan dominates international broadband speed with a median download speed of approximately 63 Mb/s, more than enough to stream DVD-quality video with surround audio in real time. Next on the list is South Korea where download speeds achieve an average of 49.50 Mb/s. Finland and France follow with 21.70 Mb/s and 17.60 Mb/s, respectively. Canada ranked eighth with an average download speed of 7.60 Mb/s. The U.S. came in 15th with 2.35 Mb/s.
I see this as an economic issue. Countries that have provided an investment in internet infrastructure to provide broadband to the home at reasonable prices will be rewarded.
Related: Speed Matter Report (pdf) – PhD Student Speeds up Broadband by 200 times – Plugging America’s Broadband Gap – The Next Generation Internet – YouTube Access Denied – internet related posts

The only problem is that America is so much bigger than a lot of these countries (except Canada), so the costs to create a major broadband infrastructure is through the roof.
That said, the Internet has massive potential and it should definitely be heavily subsidized.
that’s right america is big and you can compare it with china.. if china broadband is faster than US, that would be a problem^^
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@Paul: America is also much richer than most of these countries, and as CuriousCat said countries that invest in infrastructure will (most likely) be rewarded with economic success.