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Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector

Internet access is a prerequisite for meaningful individual and national participation in the knowledge economy and removing barriers to such access serves broader national socio-economic policy imperatives. This critical review of the literature posed the questions: What is South Africa's current t...

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Main Author: Cameron, Alan
Other Authors: Van Ryneveld, Mark
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Civil Engineering 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Cameron, Alan
author2 Van Ryneveld, Mark
author_browse Cameron, Alan
Van Ryneveld, Mark
author_facet Van Ryneveld, Mark
Cameron, Alan
author_sort Cameron, Alan
collection Thesis
description Internet access is a prerequisite for meaningful individual and national participation in the knowledge economy and removing barriers to such access serves broader national socio-economic policy imperatives. This critical review of the literature posed the questions: What is South Africa's current telecommunications context from a Universal Access and Universal Service point of view and does a market gap and/or access gap remain despite efforts to address such gaps since 1994? If so, how do either or both the market gap and access gap appear in the South African context and what are key hurdles that need to be overcome in order to close these gaps? The review provides a plain language explanation of how broadband Internet access can benefit South Africa's economy, and describes the negligible impact of existing policy in an anti-competitive market environment. A brief overview of South Africa's telecommunications history since 1994 until 2016 helps to contextualise the sector. In the early 1990s, 2% of South Africans had access to voice telephony. A few years later Universal Service and Access regulation was overtaken by the rapid adoption of mobile phones. With more than 40% voice telephony domestic penetration the network effect of quicker communication stimulated the domestic economy. Having achieved Universal Access objectives relating to voice communications, today nations seek the compounded advantages from the network effect of broadband Internet access. South Africa's GDP is predicted to grow by 1.34% for every 10% increase in broadband penetration, through increased productivity, job creation and greater access to cheaper services. However almost two thirds of South Africans cannot afford Internet access; and neither action by the free market nor the state is effectively increasing levels of cheap, accessible Internet. Incumbent service providers dominate the South African telecommunications sector and have little incentive to accelerate Internet access and adoption to low-income households and areas outside of the major metropolitan areas. It is therefore necessary that policy facilitates: competition in the ICT product and services sector, effective spectrum management, productive Internet use by lowincome households and user demand for online content.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:28.738Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher Department of Civil Engineering
publisherStr Department of Civil Engineering
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22750 Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector Cameron, Alan Van Ryneveld, Mark Cull, Domonic Urban Infrastructure Design and Management Internet access is a prerequisite for meaningful individual and national participation in the knowledge economy and removing barriers to such access serves broader national socio-economic policy imperatives. This critical review of the literature posed the questions: What is South Africa's current telecommunications context from a Universal Access and Universal Service point of view and does a market gap and/or access gap remain despite efforts to address such gaps since 1994? If so, how do either or both the market gap and access gap appear in the South African context and what are key hurdles that need to be overcome in order to close these gaps? The review provides a plain language explanation of how broadband Internet access can benefit South Africa's economy, and describes the negligible impact of existing policy in an anti-competitive market environment. A brief overview of South Africa's telecommunications history since 1994 until 2016 helps to contextualise the sector. In the early 1990s, 2% of South Africans had access to voice telephony. A few years later Universal Service and Access regulation was overtaken by the rapid adoption of mobile phones. With more than 40% voice telephony domestic penetration the network effect of quicker communication stimulated the domestic economy. Having achieved Universal Access objectives relating to voice communications, today nations seek the compounded advantages from the network effect of broadband Internet access. South Africa's GDP is predicted to grow by 1.34% for every 10% increase in broadband penetration, through increased productivity, job creation and greater access to cheaper services. However almost two thirds of South Africans cannot afford Internet access; and neither action by the free market nor the state is effectively increasing levels of cheap, accessible Internet. Incumbent service providers dominate the South African telecommunications sector and have little incentive to accelerate Internet access and adoption to low-income households and areas outside of the major metropolitan areas. It is therefore necessary that policy facilitates: competition in the ICT product and services sector, effective spectrum management, productive Internet use by lowincome households and user demand for online content. 2017-01-17T12:15:17Z 2017-01-17T12:15:17Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22750 eng application/pdf Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Urban Infrastructure Design and Management
Cameron, Alan
Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector
title_full Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector
title_fullStr Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector
title_short Understanding the market and access gaps present in South Africas broadband internet sector
title_sort understanding the market and access gaps present in south africas broadband internet sector
topic Urban Infrastructure Design and Management
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22750
work_keys_str_mv AT cameronalan understandingthemarketandaccessgapspresentinsouthafricasbroadbandinternetsector