World now has 4b phone lines, says UN


Posted on September 5, 2007  /  1 Comments

World now has 4b phone lines, says UN | Sep 05, 2007 | telecomasia.net

(Associated Press via NewsEdge) Largely because of the mobile phone boom in developing countries, telephone service has quadrupled in the past decade to 4 billion lines worldwide, according to a report from the UN telecommunications agency.

The International Telecommunications Union counts 1.27 billion fixed lines and 2.68 billion mobile accounts. The total number of people represented by those figures is unclear because many people, particularly in industrial countries, have both kinds of service.

The increase has been especially strong in developing countries that have been able to provide cellular phone service to tens of millions of people much more cheaply than having to wire up homes and offices for fixed-line telephones.

As a result, 61% of the world’s mobile subscribers are in developing countries, the ITU said. China and India, for example, together added almost 200 million mobile subscribers to the global total in the first three months of this year.

In 1996 there were fewer than 1 billion fixed-line and mobile phone subscribers altogether. Fixed-line subscriptions have grown slowly since then, but mobile has taken off, showing “spectacular success,” said Doreen Bogdan-Martin, one of the report’s authors.

The report also said more than 1 billion people in the world use the Internet.

Although the least developed countries lag in telecom service, growth is picking up in Africa, thanks to advances in technology that enable broadband connections over mobile phones.

But the report said countries may need to change their regulatory requirements if the benefits of newer networks are to be realized.

© 2007 The Associated Press.
© 2007 Dialog, a Thomson business. All rights reserved

1 Comment


  1. The article rightly notes that the ‘real’ number of people that the numbers represent are unclear due to the possibility that some people have both fixed and mobile phones; similarly, with respect to the number of mobile phones quoted (2.68b) may not take into account people who own more than one SIM card at a given point in time. Even at the BOP, it has been seen that significant numbers of mbile owners have more than one SIM card in their posession, so when you consider all layers of the economic pyramid, the impact on the number of ‘connected people’ may also be significant.