Telecommunications Stakeholder Perceptions of Teledensity: A Comparison of Stakeholders in the Latin American Region to those in Sub-Saharan Africa (original) (raw)

Growth of Teledensity in Least Developed Countries

Journal of Global Information Management, 2002

While having the lowest number of main telephone lines for every 100 inhabitants (teledensity) over the last decade, the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), have the highest average pre-tax operator profitability in the world. Many LDCs have already opened their terminal equipment markets to competition and some have also done this with data and value-added services. LDCs are greatly behind other regions of the world in terms of their levels of teledensity. This paper combines research from academic and major international organizational literature to examine and synthesize the current understanding of teledensity development in LDCs. The obstacles to growth of teledensity are discussed, and the importance and opportunities for growth of teledensity to solve priority problems and to realize sustainable development in LDCs are examined. Specifically, the framework and findings suggest that various policy, economical, financial, managerial, organizational, technological, political and g...

Predictors of growth of teledensity in developing countries: a focus on low and middle income countries

Investments in Information and Communications Technology (ICT) have been a major issue of concern in academia and industry. How much a country should invest in its telecommunications infrastructure so as to improve their levels of teledensity is a major challenge. This research examines investments in the telecommunications sector of low and middle-income developing countries. The findings suggest that increased investment in telecommunications infrastructure without the involvement of other socio-economic factors may not improve growth of teledensity in developing countries. The study, however, suggests a positive relationship between teledensity and other variables such as GDP per capita, telecommunications staff and length of wait times to acquire and maintain telephones. Some strategies are suggested as steps to take in order to improve the teledensity levels of the countries used in this study.

Telecommunications development: policy recommendations for developing countries

1996

ABSTRACT Reform of the telecommunications sector has been a worldwide policy trend since the United States, the United Kingdom and Japan drastically reorganized their domestic industries in the early 1980s. Competition has been introduced into a previously monopolistic telecommunications market by many developing as well as industrialized countries. In earlier periods, however, telecommunications monopolies effectively developed national telecommunications networks.