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Comparisons with Economic and Development Indicators

The United Nations Development Program (UNDP), the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and various other task forces are independent expert bodies which aim to provide policy advice, based on various economic factors, to governments, funding sources, and international organization for the purpose of bridging the Digital Divide. See the table below for details.

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One of the most important factors determining the economic development of a country in today’s information age is its Internet connectivity. Thus we may expect moderate to strong correlations between the economy and development of a country with its Internet performance measurement. The significance of using PingER’s Internet measurements to characterize a country’s development is due to the fact that PingER’s data is current (up-to date within a day or so compared to say the most recent Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Development Index[1] (IDI) data from the ITU that was published in 2012 and was measured in 2011) and covers countries of the world. Also PingER’s data is very objective not relying on statistics reported by governments with possibly vested interests. From the many indices available[2], we chose the IDI since it is one of the most current, it is clearly related to Internet connectivity, and covers many of the countries covered by PingER. A bubble plot of throughput vs. the IDI access sub-index[3] with the bubble sizes being proportional to population is shown in Figure 181.

 

Figure 181: Pinger Derived Throughput vs. the ICT Development index. The bubble size is proportional to the country's  population.

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