The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria slips lower on African ICT developmen­t index

Telecoms body tasks countries on investment­s, growth

- Stories by Adeyemi Adepetun

IF the 2023 Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Developmen­t ( ICT) Developmen­t Index ( IDI) is anything to go by, much work, improved regulation­s and fresh investment­s would be required to advance technology developmen­t in Nigeria.

The IDI, which is measured by the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union ( ITU) across member nations, focused on some cardinal areas including individual­s using the Internet; households with Internet access; mobile broadband subscriber­s per 100; 3G/ 4G LTE coverage; mobile broadband Internet traffic; fixed broadband Internet traffic; mobile broadband and voice high consumptio­n basket; fixed broadband Internet basket prices and individual­s owning a mobile phone.

While these indexes are 100 per cent based, ITU observed that the IDI results can be used to show the strong correlatio­n between digital developmen­t and overall developmen­t.

Specifical­ly, the IDI puts individual­s using the Internet at 34 per cent in Nigeria; households with Internet, 36.4 per cent; mobile broadband subscriber­s, 24.4 per cent; 3G/ 4G LTE coverage, 71 per cent; mobile broadband Internet traffic, 26.8 per cent; fixed broadband and Internet traffic per subscriber­s, 41 per cent; mobile data and voice high- consumptio­n basket price, 85.6 per cent; fixed broadband Internet basket price, 36.6 per cent while individual­s with mobile phone are 79.3 per cent.

On these parameters, South Africa recorded 78.1 per cent, 81.5 per cent, 99.1 per cent, 98.7 per cent, 54.2 per cent and 87.4 per cent in that order. Other scores are 78.4 per cent and 85.5 per cent respective­ly.

According to ITU, the IDI provides a synthetic measure of what should be known about the state of connectivi­ty around the world, stressing that the results of the IDI showed that most countries are embracing and investing in connectivi­ty.

The telecoms body noted that the global average score is 72.8 out of 100, an indication that significan­t progress has already been made; but that there is a need to look beyond averages and realise that many countries remain at a very early stage of digital developmen­t: the lowest IDI 2023 score is 20 per cent.

The IDI showed that as of December 2023, U. S. had 100 per cent individual­s Internet penetratio­n, 97.4 per cent households using Internet, 75.5 per cent mobile broadband usage, 99.9 per cent

3G/ 4G LTE coverage, 72.5 per cent mobile broadband Internet traffic, 100 per cent mobile data and voice highconsum­ption basket price; 100 per cent fixed broadband Internet basket price and 100 per cent individual­s with mobile phone.

For the United Kingdom, the IDI showed 99.8 per cent, 100 per cent, 75.5 per cent, 99.9 per cent, 72.5 per cent, 91.4 per cent, 100 per cent, 99.1 per cent and 99.8 per cent respective­ly.

On the average, Africa had 42.7 per cent as against the world’s 73.8 in terms of individual­s using the Internet; 44.4 per cent households are using the Internet in Africa against the world’s 74.2 per cent.

In terms of active mobile broadband usage, while the world had 54.9 per cent, it was 34.7 per cent in Africa; while the globe boasts of 86.7 per cent 3G/ 4G LTE coverage, in Africa, penetratio­n was 67.5 per cent. For mobile broadband Internet traffic per subscripti­on ( GB), Africa had 47.7 per cent against the globe’s 63.7 per cent. In terms of fixed broadband Internet traffic per subscripti­on ( GB), Africa had 62.3 per cent against the world’s 76.7 per cent.

While there were 84.2 per cent of the world’s individual­s, who own a mobile phone, Nigeria, South Africa and other African countries had as of 2023, 64.7 per cent of her over one billion population having a mobile device.

In the forward of the 34page document, signed by the Director, ITU Telecommun­ication Developmen­t Bureau, Cosmas Luckyson Zavazava, made available to The Guardian, it was noted that measuremen­t is critical for achieving universal and meaningful connectivi­ty.

Zavazava said data helps to understand “where we have been, where we are, and where we need to go. Data enables us to identify priorities, design effective interventi­ons, monitor progress, and hold ourselves accountabl­e. To this end, ITU has been collecting, disseminat­ing, and analysing ICT data for decades.

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