Document details

Measuring the Information Society: The ICT Development Index

Geneva: ITU (2009), viii, 96 pp.

Contains illustrations, many tables

ISBN 92-61-12831-9

"In the developing world, mobile phones have revolutionised telecommunication and have reached an estimated average 49.5 per cent penetration rate at the end of 2008 – from close to zero only ten years ago. This is not only faster than any other technology in the past, but the mobile phone is also the single most widespread ICT today, states the first section of this report. Then, it introduces the new ICT Development Index (IDI), aimed at capturing the level of advancement of ICTs in more than 150 countries worldwide. The Index also measures the global digital divide and examines how it has developed during the five-year period from 2002 to 2007. The results suggest that globally the digital divide is as prevalent as before, but is slightly closing between countries with very high and low ICT levels. In combining prices for fixed and mobile telephony, and broadband internet access, a new ICT Price Basket provides for the first time a measurement tool for assessing ICT affordability globally. It compares prices among countries for using the three technologies in US$ values, in Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) values, and as a percentage of Gross National Income (GNI). The results reveal that while fixed telephone tariffs are relatively cheap in most countries, tariffs for broadband internet access are often prohibitive and thus a major impediment for less developed countries." (CAMECO Update 1-2010)
1 Introduction, 1
2 ICT Market Overview, 3
3 The ITU ICT Development Index (IDI): background and methodology, 9
4 The ITU ICT Development Index (IDI): presentation and discussion of results, 21
5 Measuring the Digital Divide, 45
6 ICT Price Basket, 51
7 Conclusions, 71