For the
fourth consecutive year, this report presents two authoritative benchmarking
tools to monitor information society developments worldwide. The ICT
Development Index (IDI) ranks 155 countries� performance with regard to
information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure and uptake. The
ICT Price Basket (IPB) is a unique metric that tracks and compares the cost and
affordability of ICT services in more than 160 countries globally. Both the IDI
and the IPB combined are powerful measures for benchmarking and explaining
differences among countries and within regions when it comes to ICT
developments. This year�s edition of the report also features brand new data and
analyses on revenue and investment in the ICT sector and proposes a new
methodology to measure the world�s telecommunication capacity.
*Annex
4
features the statistical tables of prices used to compute the ICT Price Basket.
It includes detailed price data for 161 countries broken down by cost of fixed-
telephone, mobile-cellular and fixed-broadband services, for the year 2011.
There are large differences between developed and
developing countries,
with IDI values on average twice as high in the former
compared with the latter.
The most dynamic performers are
primarily from the developing world, and include countries
from all regions.
ICT Price Basket (IPB)
The affordability of ICT services
varies considerably with IPB
values ranging from less
than 1 per cent to more than 60 % of GNI p.c.
By
2011, almost half of all developing countries included in the IPB had
achieved a fixed-broadband sub-basket value of less than 5 % of GNI
p.c., a target set by the Broadband Commission for Digital Development.
The price of ICT
services has dropped on average by 30 % between 2008 and 2011.
Revenue and Investment in Telecommunications
In terms of revenues, 9 out of the top 20
telecommunication
markets are developing countries.
Since 2007
telecommunications investment has declined in developed
countries and
increased in developing countries.
Mobile revenues per subscription were higher in developed than in
developing countries,
with values of above USD 20 per month for the former
and below USD 10 for the latter.
Communication Capacity
The share of fixed Internet was more than seven times larger
in terms of capacity than in terms of subscriptions.
There has been a shift away from voice-based telephony to (fixed
and mobile) data services as the major contributor of global
subscribed capacity in telecommunications.
Measuring
the Information Society 2011
The latest edition of Measuring the Information
Society features ITU's
two key benchmarking tools to measure the Information Society: the ICT
Development Index (IDI) and the ICT Price Basket (IPB). The IDI captures the level of ICT developments in 152 economies worldwide and compares progress made
between 2008 and 2010. The IPB combines fixed telephone, mobile cellular and
fixed broadband Internet tariffs for 165 economies into one measure and compares
these across countries, and over time. The report also presents the latest
global market trends, takes a closer look at broadband and analyses the digital
divide among Internet users. The analytical report is complemented by a series
of statistical tables providing country-level data for the indicators included
in the two indices.
Order
the full report by clicking
here
or download the
free
publication (in PDF format, excluding Annex 5, which includes the tariff
data*)
*Annex
5
features the statistical tables of tariffs used to compute the ICT Price Basket.
It includes detailed tariff data for 165 countries broken down by cost of fixed
telephone services, the cost of mobile cellular services and the cost of fixed
broadband Internet services, for the year 2010.
Measuring
the Information Society 2010
The latest edition of Measuring the Information
Society features the new ITU ICT Development Index (IDI) and the ICT Price
Basket - two benchmarking tools to measure the Information Society. The IDI captures the level
of advancement of ICTs in 159 countries worldwide and compares
progress made between 2007 and 2008. It also measures the global digital divide
and examines how it has developed in recent years. The report also features the
latest ICT Price Basket, which combines 2009 fixed telephone, mobile cellular and
fixed broadband tariffs for 161 economies into one measure and compares these across countries,
and over time. The analytical report is
complemented by a series of statistical tables providing country-level data for
all indicators included in the Index.
Order
the full report by clicking
here
or download the
free
publication (in PDF format, excluding Annex 4, which includes the tariff
data*)
*Annex 4
features the statistical tables of tariffs used to compute the ICT Price Basket.
It includes detailed tariff data for 161 countries broken down by cost of fixed
telephone services, the cost of mobile cellular services and the cost of fixed
broadband Internet services, for the year 2009.
Measuring
the Information Society 2009 -
The ICT Development Index
The latest edition of Measuring the Information
Society features the new ITU ICT Development Index. The Index captures the level
of advancement of ICTs in more than 150 countries worldwide and compares
progress made between 2002 and 2007. It also measures the global digital divide
and examines how it has developed in recent years. The report also features a
new ICT Price Basket, which combines fixed, mobile and broadband tariffs for
2008 into one measure and compares it across countries. The analytical report is
complemented by a series of statistical tables providing country-level data for
all indicators included in the Index.
I
TU offers to
the general public free online access to the Adobe�
PDF format of the publication "Measuring the Information Society - The
ICT Development Index, 2009 Edition" (excluding
Annex 5).
Click
here
(revised 16 March 2009).
Annex 5 features the statistical tables of tariffs used to compute
the ICT Price Basket. It includes detailed tariff (or price) data for 150
countries broken down by cost of fixed telephone services, cost of mobile
cellular services and cost of fixed broadband Internet services, for the
year 2008.
The ITU�s 2007 ICT Opportunity Index, which
has benefited from the expertise of several international and research
organizations, is based on a carefully selected list of indicators and
methodology. It is an important tool to track the digital divide by
measuring the relative difference in ICT Opportunity levels among
economies and over time (between 2001 and 2005). The different sub-indices allow countries to
further identify their specific weaknesses and strengths (see Figure 1).
Figure 1: 2007 ICT-OI: sub-indices and indicators
Source: ITU.
The 2007 ICT-OI, which is an inclusive
index and provides measurement across 183 economies, relies on ten
indicators that help measure ICT networks, education and skills, uptake
and intensity of the use of ICT (Figure 1). For analytical purposes,
economies are grouped into four categories, ranging from high to
low ICT Opportunities. Apart from cross-country comparisons, the
index�s methodology highlights relative movements between 2001-2005. A
comparison of annual average growth rates shows which countries are
making progress and how fast.
The 2007 ICT-OI results showed that
significant progress has been made across almost all economies and all
areas of the telecommunication/ ICT sector since the beginning of this
century. At the same time, major differences remain. Countries with low ICT Opportunity levels are heavily concentrated in Africa, with some
Asian countries in this category represented as well. From the Americas, Haiti, Cuba, Honduras and
Nicaragua also have low ICT-OI levels. Many of the countries with the
highest growth rates (between 2001 and 2005) are Least Developed
Countries (LDCs). While this is a positive development, growth rates
need to be seen in perspective since high growth rates are not
necessarily sufficient to overcome the digital divide, particularly in
countries that start at very low ICT levels. It is also true that not
all developing countries have high growth rates and the list of the
countries with the lowest growth rates includes some LDCs.
The ICT-OI highlights that between
2001-2005 the divide increased between those economies that already have
very high ICT levels and the rest of the world. It decreased between the
medium group and the low group, indicating that countries
with low levels of ICT have somewhat been able to catch up and reduce
the divide compared to countries in the medium level.
An indicator-centric analysis suggests
that the majority of countries are lagging behind in terms of broadband
uptake and the difference in broadband penetration between economies
with high ICT-OI levels and the rest of the world is significant
and greater than for any other indicator. For policy makers, this
finding suggests that more efforts need to be undertaken to integrate
and strengthen broadband policies and strategies.
The 2007 ICT-OI, which is the result of
the merger of the ITU�s Digital Access Index (DAI) and Orbicom�s
Monitoring the Digital Divide/Infostate conceptual framework has been
modified since it was last published in 2005. It is an excellent example
for successful international cooperation and partnership work and
follows the explicit recommendation of the WSIS Plan of Action,
paragraph 28, to ��develop and launch a composite ICT Development
(Digital Opportunity) Index� to combine statistical indicators with
analytical work on policies and their implementation.
Table
1: 2007 ICT-OI values and sub-indices: networks, skills,
uptake and intensity, and ICT-OI average annual growth rate
2001-2005
Note: The four sub-indices are
composed of the following indicators: Network index: fixed
telephone lines per 100 inhabitants, mobile cellular subscribers per 100
inhabitants, and international internet bandwidth (kbps per inhabitant).
Skills index: adult literacy rate, and gross school enrolment
rates. Uptake index: computers per 100 inhabitants, Internet
users per 100 inhabitants and proportion of households with a TV.
Intensity index: total broadband internet subscribers per 100
inhabitants, international outgoing telephone traffic (minutes) per
capita.
The 'average annual growth rate (2001-2005)' refers to the growth of
ICT-OI values between 2001 and 2005.