Indicator: 9.c.1
0.a. Goal
Goal 9: Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation
0.b. Target
Target 9.c: Significantly increase access to information and communications technology and strive to provide universal and affordable access to the Internet in least developed countries by 2020
0.c. Indicator
Indicator 9.c.1: Proportion of population covered by a mobile network, by technology
0.e. Metadata update
2023-03-310.g. International organisations(s) responsible for global monitoring
International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
1.a. Organisation
International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
2.a. Definition and concepts
Definitions:
Proportion of population covered by a mobile network, broken down by technology, refers to the percentage of inhabitants living within range of a mobile-cellular signal, irrespective of whether or not they are mobile phone subscribers or users. This is calculated by dividing the number of inhabitants within range of a mobile-cellular signal by the total population and multiplying by 100.
Concepts:
The indicator is based on where the population lives, and not where they work or go to school, etc. When there are multiple operators offering the service, the maximum population number covered should be reported. Coverage should refer to LTE and above (4G), broadband (3G) and any technology (2G) mobile-cellular technologies and include:
- 2G mobile population coverage: refers to the percentage of inhabitants that are within range of at least a 2G mobile-cellular signal, irrespective of whether or not they are subscribers. This includes mobile-cellular technologies such as GPRS, CDMA2000 1x and most EDGE implementations. The indicator refers to the theoretical ability of subscribers to use non-broadband speed mobile data services, rather than the number of active users of such services.
- 3G population coverage: refers to the percentage of inhabitants that are within range of at least a 3G mobile-cellular signal, irrespective of whether or not they are subscribers. This is calculated by dividing the number of inhabitants that are covered by at least a 3G mobile-cellular signal by the total population and multiplying by 100. It excludes people covered only by GPRS, EDGE or CDMA 1xRTT.
- LTE population coverage: Refers to the percentage of inhabitants that live within range of LTE/LTE-Advanced, mobile WiMAX/WirelessMAN or other more advanced mobile-cellular networks, irrespective of whether or not they are subscribers. This is calculated by dividing the number of inhabitants that are covered by the previously mentioned mobile-cellular technologies by the total population and multiplying by 100. It excludes people covered only by HSPA, UMTS, EV-DO and previous 3G technologies, and also excludes fixed WiMAX coverage.
As technologies evolve and as more and more countries will deploy and commercialize more advanced mobile-broadband networks (5G etc.), the indicator will include further breakdowns.
2.b. Unit of measure
Percent (%)
2.c. Classifications
Technologies as defined in the ITU Handbook for the Collection of Administrative Data on Telecommunications/ICT 2020.
3.a. Data sources
This indicator is based on an internationally agreed definition and methodology, which have been developed under the coordination of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), through its Expert Groups and following an extensive consultation process with countries. It is also a core indicator of the Partnership on Measuring ICT for Development's Core List of Indicators, which has been endorsed by the UN Statistical Commission (last time in 2014).
ITU collects data for this indicator through an annual questionnaire from national regulatory authorities or Information and Communication Technology Ministries, who collect the data from Internet service providers.
3.b. Data collection method
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) collects data for this indicator through a questionnaire from national regulatory authorities or Information and Communication Technology Ministries, who collect the data from Internet service providers.
3.c. Data collection calendar
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) collects data twice a year from Member States, in 1st quarter and in 3rd quarter.
3.d. Data release calendar
Data are released twice a year, In July and December, in the World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators Database and in the ITU DataHub, see https://datahub.itu.int/
3.e. Data providers
Telecommunication/ Information and Communication Technology (ICT) regulatory authority, or Ministry of ICTs.
3.f. Data compilers
International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
3.g. Institutional mandate
As the UN specialized agency for Information and Communication Technology (ICTs), the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is the official source for global ICT statistics, collecting ICT data from its Member States, see resolution 131 of the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference, https://www.itu.int/pub/S-CONF-ACTF-2022 .
4.a. Rationale
The percentage of the population covered by a mobile cellular network can be considered as a minimum indicator for Information and Communication Technology (ICT) access since it provides people with the possibility to subscribe to and use mobile-cellular services to communicate. Over the last decade, mobile-cellular networks have expanded rapidly and helped overcome very basic infrastructure barriers that existed when fixed-telephone networks – often limited to urban and highly populated areas - were the dominant telecommunication infrastructure.
While 2G (narrowband) mobile-cellular networks offer limited (and mainly voice-based) services, higher-speed networks (3G and LTE) provide increasingly high-speed, reliable and high-quality access to the Internet and its increasing amount of information, content, services, and applications. Mobile networks are therefore essential to overcoming infrastructure barriers, helping people join the information society and benefit from the potential of ICTs, in particular in least developed countries.
The indicator highlights the importance of mobile networks in providing basic, as well as advanced communication services and will help design targeted policies to overcome remaining infrastructure barriers, and address the digital divide. Many governments track this indicator and have set specific targets in terms of the mobile population coverage (by technology) that operators must achieve.
4.b. Comment and limitations
Some countries have difficulty calculating overall mobile-cellular population coverage. In some cases, data refer only to the operator with the largest coverage, and this may understate the true coverage.
4.c. Method of computation
The indicator percentage of the population covered by a mobile network, broken down by technology, refers to the percentage of inhabitants living within range of a mobile-cellular signal, irrespective of whether or not they are mobile phone subscribers or users. This is calculated by dividing the number of inhabitants within range of a mobile-cellular signal by the total population and multiplying by 100.
4.d. Validation
Data are submitted by Member States to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). ITU checks and validates the data, in consultation with the Member States.
4.f. Treatment of missing values (i) at country level and (ii) at regional level
• At country level
Missing values are estimated using data published by mobile cellular operators that have the largest market share.
• At regional and global levels
Missing values are estimated using data published by mobile cellular operators that have the largest market share.
4.g. Regional aggregations
Global and regional estimates are produced using weighted country-level data. First, the missing country-level data are estimated using data of the dominant mobile operator. Once all the country-level percentages are available, the number of people covered by the mobile signal is calculated by multiplying the percentage of population covered by the signal to the population of the country. The regional and world total population covered by a signal were calculated by summing the country-level data. The aggregate percentages were calculated by dividing the regional totals by the population of respective groups.
4.h. Methods and guidance available to countries for the compilation of the data at the national level
ITU Handbook for the Collection of Administrative Data on Telecommunications/ICT 2020: https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Pages/publications/handbook.aspx
4.i. Quality management
Data are checked and validated by the ICT Data and Analytics (IDA) Division of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Countries are contacted to clarify and correct their submissions.
4.j. Quality assurance
The guidelines of the ITU Handbook for the Collection of Administrative Data on Telecommunications/ICT 2020 are followed.
4.k. Quality assessment
The guidelines of the ITU Handbook for the Collection of Administrative Data on Telecommunications/ICT 2020 are followed.
5. Data availability and disaggregation
Data availability:
Data for this indicator exist for more than 160 economies.
Time series:
1997 onwards for 2G
2007 onwards for 3G
2012 onwards for LTE
Disaggregation:
Based on the data for the percentage of the population covered by a mobile network, broken down by technology, and on rural population figures, countries can produce estimates on rural and urban population coverage. International Telecommunication Union (ITU) produces global estimates for the rural population coverage, by technology.
6. Comparability/deviation from international standards
Sources of discrepancies:
None. International Telecommunication Union (ITU) uses the data provided by countries, including the in-scope population that is used to calculate the percentages.
7. References and Documentation
URL:
http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Pages/default.aspx
References:
ITU Handbook for the Collection of Administrative Data on Telecommunications/ICT 2020: https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Pages/publications/handbook.aspx