India has lowest mobile data cost

By News Report
November 22, 2019

LONDON: India, where fewer than 2 percent of users connect over a landline, has the cheapest average data cost at just 26 US cents per gigabyte, according to a survey of over 6,000 mobile data plans in 230 countries.

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The low cost is partly down to the nation’s vibrant market and high technological awareness, which means there is strong adoption and competition is high.

Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and Rwanda are the other nations making up the cheapest five and all have average costs below 60 cents. They also have low levels of landline connection rates.

By contrast, the most expensive nation on earth to buy mobile data is Zimbabwe, with an eye-watering average of $75.20. The country’s most expensive provider charges a massive $138.46. After a period of hyperinflation, Zimbabwe’s inflation rate slipped below 60 percent this year.

Countries with developed cable networks are among the most expensive places to buy mobile data. In the United States, the average cost of a gigabyte of data is more than $12, putting it at number 182 in the rankings. The UK fared little better with an average cost of $6.66, ranked at number 136. Finland by contrast has both some of the best fixed communications infrastructure and Europe’s lowest data costs. Europe’s most expensive data is found in Greece, where the cost averages $32.71.

Asian countries make up half of the top 20 cheapest in the world. Despite high prices in Zimbabwe, 10 of the top 50 cheapest data nations are in sub-Saharan Africa, where mobile dominates the communications infrastructure.

“Many of the cheapest countries in which to buy mobile data fall roughly into one of two categories,” says Dan Howdle, analyst at cable.co.uk, which carried out the research. Excellent infrastructure or a heavy reliance on phones for connectivity usually lead to lower prices, the survey showed.

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