Indian Women 28 Percent Less Likely Than Men to Own a Mobile Phone: GSMA

Indian Women 28 Percent Less Likely Than Men to Own a Mobile Phone: GSMA

Photo Credit: GSMA

Around 150 million more women in low and middle-income countries became mobile owners since 2014

Highlights
  • Women are 56 percent less likely to use mobiles, says the report
  • The gender gap is the widest in the South Asia region
  • Only 42 percent of Indian women are aware of internet access on mobile
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Women in India are 28 percent less likely than men to own a mobile phone and 56 percent less likely than men to use mobile Internet, a new report by GSM Association (GSMA) said on Wednesday.

Across all low and middle-income countries, 80 percent of women are mobile owners while in India, only 59 percent use mobile phones, representing some of the largest mobile gender gaps in the world, said the report by GSMA, a trade body that represents the interests of mobile network operators globally.

"We are seeing significantly increased mobile access for women. However, in an increasingly connected world, women are still being left behind," Mats Granryd, Director General, GSMA, said in a statement.

According to the GSMA's "2019 Mobile Gender Gap Report", just 42 percent of women in India are aware of the Internet, and that it can be used on a mobile phone.

This is an increase from a meagre 19 percent among women in India in 2017.

"While mobile connectivity is spreading quickly, it is not spreading equally. Unequal access to mobile technology threatens to exacerbate the inequalities women already experience," Granryd added.

Nearly 250 million more women in low and middle-income countries have become mobile owners since 2014.

Eighty percent women in low and middle-income countries are now mobile owners globally and mobile phone is the primary means of Internet access in these markets, where 48 percent of women use mobile to get online.

Closing the mobile gender gap in these markets represents a $140 billion commercial opportunity for the mobile industry over the next five years.

However, despite the growth in connectivity, the gender gap in mobile ownership is not closing.

"Women remain 10 percent less likely than men to own a mobile phone in low-and middle-income countries and 23 percent less likely than men to use mobile Internet," said the report.

The mobile gender gap varies by region and country but is widest in South Asia where women are 28 percent less likely than men to own a mobile device and 58 percent less likely to use the mobile Internet.

Network service providers such as Vodafone Idea and Bharti Airtel have signed up for the "GSMA Connected Women Programme's Commitment Initiative" and have pledged to reduce the gender gap in their customer bases by 2020.

The report noted that in the wake of the Digital India programme, much of vital public information and services are only available online. However, without access to Internet, women in India may face accessibility issues.



(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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Further reading: Mobile Gender Gap, GSMA
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