This is the version of the backgrounder prepared for the Plenipotentiary 2018 Conference in October/November 2018. For the most recent version of this backgrounder, please see here.

Overview

  • About half the world's people  access and use the Internet. The other half do not. The majority of the unconnected live in least developed countries, landlocked developing countries and small island developing states. At current growth rates, every year, there are some 195 million new Internet users, but substantial digital divides persist between more and less connected countries, communities, and people.
  • With efficient and affordable information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure and services, and the right digital, language and soft skills like teamwork, individuals and businesses can participate in the digital economy. This, in turn, allows countries to increase their overall economic well-being and competitiveness.
  • People and communities that are connected are empowered. They can access information, online health services and life-saving disaster warnings. They can pay for goods and services via mobile phones, stay in touch with loved ones, increase productivity or perform better-paid jobs that require digital skills.
  • Enabling all the world´s people to access and use the Internet—and removing digital divides—remains a challenge that needs to be addressed if the world community is to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.


Digital Inclusion for allWSIS Forum 2018 Photo Contest, Nagaland Tribe Connecting the World, India

Challenges

Substantial digital divides persist between countries. Indeed, 80.9 per cent of people were using the Internet in developed countries at the end of 2018, compared with 45.3 per cent in developing countries.

Digital divides are also evident within countries. Men, urban residents and young people are more likely to be online than women, rural dwellers and older people. The digital gender gap is relatively small in developed countries, more pronounced in developing countries and substantial in least developed countries.

Divides often stem from insufficient or slow connectivity, the cost of connection and a lack of relevant content in local languages. These barriers are therefore often related to age, gender, disability, socioeconomic status and geography.

Solutions

Efficient and affordable ICT infrastructure and services, combined with enabling policy and regulatory environments, allow businesses and governments to participate in the digital economy and countries to increase their overall economic well-being and competitiveness. Some 20 countries have made Internet access a fundamental or citizen right.

Mobile technology is rapidly migrating from 2G—second-generation of mobile technologies—to 3G to 4G. At the end of 2018, 90 per cent of the global population could access the Internet through a 3G or higher quality network. Developed countries' initial adoption of 5G networks is expected to exacerbate the current digital divide, as developing countries are likely to take longer to implement 5G networks. Developing countries can, however, use existing ecosystems and networks to provide universal and affordable access to ICTs. Mobile networks can be gradually upgraded once the challenges to develop a sustainable 5G system have been overcome.

Satellite services provide fixed and mobile services throughout the world. The global harmonization of mobile spectrum by ITU, together with the development of common international standards, has resulted in economies of scale leading to the reduction of prices of services and devices for both networks and end-users.

Mobile cellular networks now dominate the provision of basic telecommunication services. In developing countries, the number of mobile cellular subscriptions more than quadrupled between 2005 and 2017, reaching 98.7 per 100 inhabitants in 2017. In least developed countries, the number of mobile cellular subscriptions grew fourteenfold since 2005, reaching an estimated 70.4 per 100 inhabitants in 2017. In 2018, the number of mobile-cellular telephone subscriptions was greater than the global population.

Broadband Internet networks are vital national infrastructure. Mobile broadband services, which tend to be cheaper than fixed broadband services, have increased rapidly and provide the most common means of access to the Internet and online services. The number of active mobile-broadband subscriptions have increased from 268 million in 2007 to 5.3 billion in 2018. In developing countries, penetration rates of mobile broadband subscriptions reached 61 per 100 inhabitants in 2018. In least developed countries, penetration rates went up from virtually zero in 2007 to 28.4 subscriptions per 100 in 2018.

To make the best use of the Internet, people require digital skills, presentation and teamwork skills, and foreign language skills.

ITU's contribution to including everyone, everywhere in a digital society

ITU works in all regions of the world and develops tailored programmes to allow everyone to access and use the Internet, in particular by developing infrastructure for technologies and networks, and enhancing the regulatory and market environment.

The global “Connect 2020 Agenda for Global Telecommunication/ICT Development" to shape the future of the ICT sector was unanimously adopted at the ITU 2014 Plenipotentiary Conference. It sets out the shared vision, goals and targets that Member States have committed to achieve by 2020 in collaboration with all stakeholders across the ICT ecosystem. The agenda strives for four goals: 1) Growth – Enable and foster access to and increased use of telecommunications/ICTs; 2) Inclusiveness – Bridge the digital divide and provide broadband for all; 3) Sustainability – Manage challenges resulting from the telecommunication/ICT development; and 4) Innovation and partnership – Lead, improve and adapt to the changing telecommunication/ICT environment. The ITU 2018 Plenipotentiary Conference is expected to review the goals and related global targets, setting the priorities in connecting the unconnected.

ITU collects ICT statistics for 200 economies and more than 100 indicators to better understand connectivity challenges and to benchmark and measure progress, including on broadband, Internet use and mobile cellular and mobile broadband networks. The Organization provides free access to a large amount of ICT statistics and recommendations as to what can be done to address challenges. ITU publishes the Yearbook of Statistics and its flagship report “Measuring the Information Society," which includes the ICT Development Index (IDI) and the ICT Price Basket (IPB).

ITU raises awareness and assists countries in developing the policies, legislation, regulations and business practices that promote the digital inclusion of people with specific needs. These include indigenous peoples, people living in rural areas, people with disabilities, women and girls and youth and children.

To help bridge digital divides, ITU has also published a number of publications including Bridging the Digital Innovation Divide, Achieving Universal and Affordable Internet in the Least Developed Countries, and many others.

Below are just a few examples showing how governments and the private sector can increase countries' and people's connectivity: 

Relevant links

Last update: 7 December 2018