Fixed broadband household penetration in developing markets is on track to pass the 50% mark by the end of the decade.
But the region is home to a mix of mature, emerging and youth markets. In Asia at the country level, it is clear that the international digital divide will remain a fact of life to the end of the decade and beyond. If you look more closely at the differences between cities and rural areas the divides are even greater. The national challenges are not so much how to deliver ever-faster broadband services but how to provide them across whole countries.
A year ago the ITU called on governments of the world to push for 50% global broadband penetration by 2015. The number of internet users doubled between 2004 and 2009, with global internet penetration hitting 26% – but only one in ten homes in developing countries had access to the internet.
The deployment of next-generation networks, using a combination of technologies across the region, is allowing service providers to deliver innovative offerings to their users who have pent-up demand for services such as multi-play packages, IPTV, fixed-mobile convergence and sophisticated enterprise solutions.
Factors that shaping this dynamic market include gross national income, the growth of urban populations, national regulatory environments and the spending plans and policies of governments in the region. For fixed broadband to be competitive and affordable to the masses, it’s essential that competition in broadband markets is free and fair.
Next Generation Broadband Tracks | CommunicAsia2011
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