Will Telecommunications Development Improve the Quality of Life in African Countries?
Journal article, 2012

This study aims to measure quality of life (QOL) at the individual level in African countries in relation to the accessibility of mobile phones and the Internet. QOL is proxied by self-reported data on household income, participation in decision-making and productivity, which is measured in additional working hours. The main methodology is a descriptive analysis that presents a cross-tabulation of the QOL indicator before and after access to mobile phones and the Internet. A specific index of the Gini coefficient and Lorenz curve is also presented in relation to income distribution. The study found that access to telecommunication devices has contributed very little to closing the income gap in places where the mobile phone has had a slightly higher impact than Internet access. The impact on self-reported participation and productivity is also similar in places where there is no strong evidence that access to both devices is sufficient to motivate users to become more involved and productive. The choice of the QOL variables is still under discussion. It also has to be said that the proxies for QOL are still very raw, as is the way of measuring it. The descriptive analysis does not provide the causality between the variables, and is rather an indication of the phenomenon – whether access to telecommunication devices leads to a better QOL index. This paper indicates a need to design policies for the telecommunications sector in African countries with a stronger connection between access to and use of the devices and economic activities. The policy should also aim to reduce the polarisation of access and use by providing a telecommunications infrastructure in all the countries, thereby decreasing the cost of access and usage. Such policies require close collaboration between the governments and the private sector.

quality of life

Africa

mobile phone

the Internet

Author

Ibrahim Kholilul Rohman

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Technology and Society

Info

1463-6697 (ISSN) 1465-9840 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 4

Subject Categories

Other Mechanical Engineering

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Driving Forces

Innovation and entrepreneurship

DOI

10.1108/14636691211240879

More information

Latest update

10/5/2023