Phones at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Telecom Accessibility


Posted on November 2, 2007  /  0 Comments

i4d, a reputed Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) magazine, recently featured an article co-written by LIRNEasia researcher Ayesha Zainudeen based on LIRNEasia‘s Teleuse at the Bottom of the Pyramid study conducted in 2006. The article highlights the study’s main findings with a special emphasis on the gendered aspects of telecommunications use at the BOP.

Phones at the bottom of the pyramid: Telecom Accessibility – i4d Magazine

In a 2006 five-country study, which was conducted by LIRNEasia, researchers asked 6,269 respondents in Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Thailand about their access to, and use of telephones. Those surveyed were all users at the lowest socio-economic strata in the countries, at ‘the bottom of the pyramid’ (BOP). Their responses revealed many differences between users in the five countries, but more interestingly, inter-country inequalities in phone use between men and women. Indeed, the data indicates that a gender divide in mobile access clearly exists in India and Pakistan, which is less prevalent in Sri Lanka, and is generally absent in the Philippines and Thailand.

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