Eighty percent of sub-Saharan Africa’s 800 million people should have access to mobile telephones by the end of the decade, double the current rate, although government help is needed to reach far-flung areas, industry body group GSMA said on Wednesday.
The growth of mobile data — an even more powerful economic tool than simple voice services — also hinges on authorities allocating sufficient spectrum, GSMA Africa director Mortimer Hope said.
“We expect data to keep growing dramatically and to facilitate that you need more spectrum to handle that data growth,” he said on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum Africa in Cape Town.
To unleash the full potential of mobile Internet services, he said, governments should also consider cutting taxes on Web-enabled handsets to make them more affordable to consumers on the poorest continent.
At the moment, about 15 percent of Africans have access to the Internet via their mobile phones.
“It’s very early days for data, but we would like it be everywhere you have voice. The extra physical infrastructure deployment is not as big as you would think,” Hope said.
Mobile phones have been one of the factors behind Africa’s recent growth spurt, by freeing people from the shackles of the continent’s awful landline infrastructure and allowing them to communicate and transact at minimal personal and financial cost.
The simple SMS — and more recently mobile social media — have also become powerful political tools, used by grassroots political movements to mobilize support against oppressive states, such as happened in the north African Arab Spring.
Governments across the continent are aware of the economic potential of mobile telephony, but are sometimes slow to implement the legal frameworks needed to allow phone companies to expand, Hope said.
“Many governments across Africa have developed broadband plans. The issue is that those plans very often just sit on a shelf, not being implemented,” he said.
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