{"id":30468,"date":"2013-08-23T09:02:01","date_gmt":"2013-08-23T14:02:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.ict-pulse.com\/?p=30468"},"modified":"2013-08-23T09:02:01","modified_gmt":"2013-08-23T14:02:01","slug":"increase-broadband-internet-access-caribbean","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ict-pulse.com\/2013\/08\/increase-broadband-internet-access-caribbean\/","title":{"rendered":"What will it take to increase broadband Internet access in the Caribbean?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Caribbean policymakers have been advocating a change in focus from voice telephony, especially mobile\/cellular communications, to the Internet. This post is starting the conversation on what will it take to increase broadband Internet access in the Caribbean.<\/em><\/p>\n At the Caribbean ICT Ministers\u2019 Forum held on 7\u20149 August in Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica\u2019s Minister for Science, Technology, Energy and Mining, Honourable Philip Paulwell, sought to draw attention to the importance of the Internet in today\u2019s world:<\/p>\n \u2026today I challenge Caribbean peoples, Governments and telecoms operators alike: let us begin to think beyond voice telephony, he said. Let us divest ourselves of this pre-occupation with voice and pursue what really should be our true goal: affordable and ubiquitous broadband Internet access.<\/em><\/p>\n A 10 percent rise in market penetration of broadband services would correlate to an average GDP increase of 3.2 percent, he said, with a corresponding productivity boost of 2.6 percent.<\/em><\/p>\n (Source: Caribbean Journal<\/a>)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Minister\u2019s Paulwell\u2019s position is not unique. Worldwide, most Ministers with responsibility for technology, ICT, or telecoms have begun to appreciate the potential impact of ICT, and specifically the Internet, on economic, social, and overall national development. However, what will it take to increase broadband Internet access in the Caribbean? We begin to examine this question.<\/p>\n Across the Caribbean, the medium that provides citizens with the greatest access to telecoms services is mobile\/cellular communications. As reported in our 2013 Snapshot<\/i><\/b>,<\/a> most countries have been enjoying relatively high mobile\/cellular service penetration, ranging from as low as 64 subscriptions per 100 inhabitants in Belize, to over 205 subscriptions per 100 inhabitants in the British Virgin Islands.<\/p>\n On the other hand, the reach of Internet broadband service is considerably less. With regard to fixed broadband, the highest subscription penetration in 2012 was found in the Cayman Islands, at 33 subscriptions per 100 of the population, whilst the lowest was found in Belize, at 3 subscriptions per 100 of the population (see Figure 1)<\/p>\nWhat is the current state of Internet broadband in the region?<\/h3>\n