By Adeyemi Adepetun
Virtually, all urban areas in the world are covered by a mobile broadband network, but worrying gaps in connectivity and Internet access persist in rural areas, according to Measuring Digital Development:
Facts and figures 2020, a new report launched on Monday, by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).Compounded by the COVID-19 crisis, connectivity gaps in rural areas are particularly pronounced in the least developed countries (LDCs), where 17 per cent of the rural population live in areas with no mobile coverage at all, and 19 per cent of the rural population is covered by only a 2G network.
A 2019 data indicated that globally, about 72 per cent of households in the urban areas had access to the Internet at home, almost twice as much as in the rural areas (38 per cent).
International Telecommunications Union Secretary-General, Houlin Zhao, said: “How much longer can we tolerate the significant gap in household connectivity between urban and rural areas?
“In the age of COVID-19, where so many are working and studying from home, this edition of Measuring Digital Development: Facts and figures send the clear message that accelerating infrastructure roll-out is one of the most urgent and defining issues of our time.”
Director of the ITU Telecommunication Development Bureau, Doreen Bogdan-Martin, explained that this edition of Measuring Digital Development: Facts and figures were released at a challenging time, as COVID-19 wreaks havoc on lives, societies, and economies around the world.
“For the first time, our research contains estimates of the connectivity status of small island developing states and landlocked developing countries, in addition to least developed countries: this is a very important milestone in our efforts to achieve sustainable development for all.”
The research revealed that about a quarter of the population in LDCs and LLDCs, and about 15 per cent of the populations in SIDS do not have access to a mobile broadband network. Thus falling short of the Sustainable Development Goals Target 9.c to significantly increase access to information and communications technology and strive to provide universal and affordable access to the Internet in the least developed countries by 2020.
Not surprisingly, Internet use is consistently more widespread among young people, irrespective of region or level of development. Whereas just over half of the total global population is using the Internet, while the proportion of Internet use increases to almost 70 per cent among young people aged 15-24 years.
In LDCs, 38 per cent of youth are using the Internet, whereas the overall share of people using it, including youth, stands at 19 per cent.
In developed countries, the report noted that virtually all young persons are using the Internet, while the highest youth/overall ratio is present in Asia and the Pacific.
The latest ITU data demonstrate that the roll-out of mobile-broadband networks has been slowing in 2020.
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