Monday, March 23, 2009

NYT: Can the Cellphone Help End Global Poverty?

This is one of the most thought-provoking articles i've read lately:
...even very poor families invested a significant amount of money in the I.C.T. category — information-communication technology, which, according to Al Hammond, the study’s principal author, can include money spent on computers or land-line phones, but in this segment of the population that’s almost never the case. What they’re buying, he says, are cellphones and airtime, usually in the form of prepaid cards. Even more telling is the finding that as a family’s income grows — from $1 per day to $4, for example — their spending on I.C.T. increases faster than spending in any other category, including health, education and housing. “It’s really quite striking,” Hammond says. “What people are voting for with their pocketbooks, as soon as they have more money and even before their basic needs are met, is telecommunications.”

Also - "The world added the last 1 billion [cell phone] subscribers between the third quarter of 2007 and the end of 2008" -- in less than 18 months. Staggering!!

No comments:

Post a Comment