
The price of broadband service will play a critical role in achieving these targets. According to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), broadband penetration grows rapidly after the level of retail broadband price falls below 3 to 5 percent of average monthly income. In the MENA region, fixed broadband prices constitute roughly 3.6 percent of the average monthly income per capita, while mobile broadband prices stand at about 7.7 percent. While Djibouti, Syria, and the Republic of Yemen are significantly above the 5 percent threshold, a number of countries (i.e., Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, and Tunisia) have just reached the level that makes rapid broadband takeoff possible.
Source: Gelvanovska, Natalija, Michel Rogy and Carlo Maria Rossotto. 2014. Broadband Networks in the Middle East and North Africa, Accelerating High-Speed Internet Access. Directions in Development. Washington, DC: World Bank. doi: 10.1596/978-1-4648-0112-9. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 (p.37)
But the current level of broadband prices is not low enough to be truly inclusive. There is an ongoing risk that millions of people will remain excluded from the information revolution that is shaping the modern world. In countries such as Algeria, Djibouti, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, and the Republic of Yemen, both fixed and mobile broadband services are far from being affordable for at least 60 percent of the population. For instance, a representative household in the lowest 60 percent income bracket of Morocco would need to spend about 26 percent of its disposable income to afford fixed broadband services and about 23 percent to afford mobile services. In spite of important reforms undertaken by Morocco, a leader in many respects, broadband services are still unaffordable for the majority of the population. In Yemen, a representative household in the lowest 60 percent income bracket would need to spend about 49 percent of its disposable income to afford fixed broadband services and about 38 percent to afford mobile services.
In our new report Broadband Networks in the Middle East and North Africa: Accelerating High –Speed Internet Access to be launched February 6 in Abu Dhabi, we identify the key factors limiting the development of broadband. For most countries in the region it is a lack of both effective competition and appropriate incentives to deploy and/or fully utilize infrastructure. Addressing these factors would allow the region to leverage two very distinctive assets more effectively. The first is the world class broadband fixed technologies such as Fiber To the Home / The Building or mobile technologies such as 4G/LTE that are currently being rolled out. The second is the extensive terrestrial fiber networks belonging to utilities that could potentially be opened up to telecoms operators. A strategic framework of reforms could speed up the deployment of cutting edge technology and extend the geographical reach and resilience of national networks connecting countries, regions, and cities. More competition would also guarantee that the new technologies and expanded networks were more affordable. Lower costs would increase access, especially for the region’s large youth population, who are the future engine of the economy and of society. Lowering the barriers of cost will ensure that broadband internet has its full developmental impact.
Source: https://blogs.worldbank.org/arabvoices/lowering-barriers-high-speed-internet-arab-world
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