National Broadband Plan increases mobile and fixed penetration

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V&D Bureau
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National Broadband Plan increases mobile and fixed penetration says a new research undertaken by ITU called Planning for Progress: Why National Broadband Plans Matter.

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Countries with a clearly-defined national vision for broadband roll-out are significantly out-performing those taking a more laissez-faire approach to broadband development, according to a new joint report released by ITU, the Broadband Commission for Digital Development and network equipment maker Cisco Systems.

Data indicates that countries with a National Broadband Plan have fixed broadband penetration some 8.7 percent higher on average than countries without plans. Once the potential impact of factors like higher average income per capita, market concentration and urbanization are discounted, research suggests that countries with plans benefit from fixed broadband penetration on average 2.5 percent higher than countries without plans - a significant margin of advantage in an increasingly interconnected global economy.

In mobile, the impact may be even greater. Countries which have National Broadband Plans also have mobile broadband penetration some 7.4 percent higher on average than countries without plans.

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The report concludes that market competition also plays a strong role in boosting broadband penetration. Competitive markets are associated with broadband penetration levels some 1.4 percent higher on average for fixed broadband and up to 26.5 percent higher on average for mobile broadband.

"Governments are realizing that broadband networks are not just vital to national competitiveness, but to the delivery of education, healthcare, public utilities like energy and water, environmental management, and a whole host of government services. Broadband is the key enabler not just of human interaction, but of the machine-to-machine communications systems that will underpin tomorrow's world," said Dr Hamdoun I Toure, secretary-general, ITU.

"Broadband plans clearly matter. Plans spur adoption, accelerating economic growth and increasing national competitiveness. The role of policy is to set a vision for broadband development and ensure a level playing field which then allows for the best ideas to prosper," said Dr Robert Pepper, vice president Global Technology Policy, Cisco Systems.

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The report also documents strong recent growth in National Broadband Plans, with 134 plans in force by mid-2013. Plans may take different forms (legislation, policy frameworks, government strategy and/or regulations), but all share a common emphasis on the vital role of broadband in underpinning national competitiveness, and aim to extend the national footprint of broadband networks and drive increased use of broadband-enabled services and applications.

The full economic and social benefits are most likely to be realized where there is strong partnership between government and industry, and where governments engage in a consultative, participatory approach to policy in conjunction with key stakeholders, the report says.

Broadband Plans should be viewed as part of a process towards building consensus around a vision for the development of broadband within a society, rather than the final outcome itself.

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