ICT Penetration India
ICT Penetration India
ICT Penetration India
Having said that, India presents a confusing picture from the perspective of ICT penetration. If we look at three
major indictors of analysis-the PC, the Internet and the mobile phone-the variations are surprising, but there are
also reasons for these that need urgent attention from both policy makers and market forces.
PC usage
The penetration of PCs in India is abysmally low, about 26%. Only about 3% of India's population owns a
computer as compared to China where ownership figures are five times higher. Rising incomes in middle class
India do not translate into PC ownership because of lack of awareness of how the PC can be of real use in an
average home. Falling computer prices have made PCs a lot more attractive, and the notebook market has been
the gainer in urban areas. Poor dial-up connections have been cited as a major reason for low PC penetration
and the government has plans to encourage WiMAX network deployment to remedy this.
However, it is penetration in rural and peri-urban India that will drive volumes. Various government initiatives to
boost usage like the five-year e-government and the ambitious IUDAI identity card scheme are yet to take off in
a complete sense. The next decade is likely to see some momentous changes. However, rather using ownership
data to gauge penetration, it would be more pertinent to look at community computer usage through cybercafes,
schools, kiosks, e-governance centres, etc. A drive to enhance such facilities will impact penetration and in the
long-run result in increased ownership.
Internet penetration
Internet usage has been rising steadily. In 2009, 63 million Indians are using the Internet (defined as anyone who
uses the internet once a month), representing a mere 5.2% of the country's population. A survey conducted
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recently by the e-Tech group of IRB International and IAMAI for 2009-2010 (which also covered 100 SMEs
among households, individuals and cyber cafes in 31 Indian cities) shows some interesting results. It appears that
a growing number of Internet users live in India's small- and medium-sized urban centres and not in metros as is
commonly perceived. Of the total users in 2009, for instance, 34% lived in the top 8 metros, 18% in large towns,
12% in towns with 5-10 lakh population and a surprising 36%, the largest group, in towns with below 5 lakh
population. Compare this to the year 2000, when only 5% of the total Internet usages (itself an abysmal 5 million
users) was attributed to towns with population of less than 5 lakh people.
Clearly, the desire to be connected and use technology is widespread. The delivery of government services via
the Internet, e-commerce, ease of access to information, popularity of social networking among youth, a higher
presence of e-kiosks, mobile phone penetration and affordable plans from ISPs are all contributing factors to this
phenomenon. This also means good news for SMEs, many of which are located in non-metro urban areas and
serve and employ semi-urban and even rural populations.
Impact on SMEs
SMEs are increasingly deploying information technology to improve performance and efficiency, reach out to
more customers and deliver value-added products and services. A technology-enabled environment where
connectivity is cost-effective, speedy and reliable translates into profits for SMEs.
SMEs need to leverage the transformations in the Indian ICT landscape to their advantage by looking out for
government schemes and attractive deals from private sector service providers while also investing in appropriate
software for their businesses.
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