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The future of broadband in Africa

Christoph Stork (Senior Researcher at Research ICT Africa, Cape Town, South Africa)
Enrico Calandro (Researcher based at the University of Cape Town, Pretoria, South Africa; and Research ICT Africa, Cape Town, South Africa)
Ranmalee Gamage (Researcher based at LIRNEasia, Colombo, Sri Lanka)

info

ISSN: 1463-6697

Article publication date: 7 January 2014

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Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to provide an answer as to whether fibre to the home and other types of fixed internet access still have a role to play in Africa beyond a few urban elites, as well as what business models are likely to be successful in the African context.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper uses data from nationally representative ICT household surveys conducted in 12 African countries in 2012. These data are complemented by an OECD broadband pricing methodology and data. In addition to the OECD basket methodology, own baskets were defined to capture the complexity of African products, and to draw out the different business models for fixed and mobile broadband.

Findings

The paper demonstrates that if fixed internet is provided as an uncapped service at an affordable price, it has a chance to at least co-exist with mobile broadband in Africa. The availability of fixed internet is rapidly diminishing where it is offered as a capped service and not at prices similar to mobile broadband. The paper also demonstrates that fixed-line telecommunication companies should to focus on data only before mobile operators do, and they lose out once again.

Practical implications

In Africa, mobile voice overtook fixed voice at the turn of the millennium with the introduction of prepaid services. Ten years later, mobile internet is rapidly overtaking fixed internet by overcoming key obstacles to fixed internet access. While the developed world discusses the merits of fixed and mobile broadband, it is clear that for Africa, fixed broadband in the form of fibre to the home, or even plain ADSL, will only reach a few urban elites in the next decade. Fixed-line operators then should rethink their pricing and investment strategies: they are advised to invest in high-speed technologies such as VDSL or fibre to the home, if fixed broadband is to stand a chance against mobile broadband. Whether fixed-line operators will lose the data battle as well will be determined by their business decisions as well as by policy and regulatory interventions.

Originality/value

This paper uses primary household and individual data that allows for a better understanding of internet access and use in Africa. The analysis of internet access prices for ADSL against prepaid and post-paid mobile broadband is used to assess broadband business strategies across 12 African countries. The paper provides policymakers and regulators with the evidence required for an informed ICT policy and regulation and it recommends business strategies that should be pursued by operators to improve broadband sector performance.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Received 10 October 2013 Revised 10 October 2013 Accepted 18 October 2013 The household survey was funded by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC). The IDRC had no influence on the content of the paper.

Citation

Stork, C., Calandro, E. and Gamage, R. (2014), "The future of broadband in Africa", info, Vol. 16 No. 1, pp. 76-93. https://doi.org/10.1108/info-10-2013-0055

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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