18 million Kenyans are internet poor - Report
The 2022 Internet Poverty Index by the World Data Lab’s projects that 18,326,767 out of 51,575,750 Kenyans are living with internet poverty.
According to the study, internet poverty is
measured by how many people can or cannot afford a minimum package of mobile
internet.
It is based on affordability, quantity and
quality of internet in a country, where affordability assumes 10% of total
spending of a citizen.
Quantity assumes a 1GB monthly usage, while
quality is gauged by download and upload speed, bandwidth, latency, 2G, 3G, and
4G coverage, as well as the number of servers per 100,000 inhabitants.
As such, a person is
considered internet poor if they cannot afford a minimum quantity (1 GB) and
quality (10 Mbps download speed) of internet services without spending more
than 10 percent of their disposable income.
Out of the Kenyan population, internet poverty is higher among females (36.9% of Kenyan women are internet poor), compared to 34.1% of the male population.
Burundi leads the internet poverty index
across the continent, with 96.6% of the country’s population living in poverty.
Madagascar and Malawi follow with 96.2% and
95.5% respectively.
On the other hand, Algeria, Mauritius and
Tunisia lead the internet connectivity in Africa, with just under 3% of their
populations living in internet poverty.
There are nearly 1.4 billion persons (18
percent of the world population) who live in internet poverty, 709 million
(50%) of whom live in Africa.
At the same time, nearly 33% (457 million) of the world’s
internet poor population is from Asia.
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