Abstract

Mobile broadband internet is the main technology through which individuals access the internet in developing countries. Understanding the barriers to broadband adoption is thus a priority in designing policies aiming to expand access and close the digital divide across socioeconomic groups and territories. This paper exploits data from harmonized household expenditure surveys in seven countries in West Africa in 2018/19—a subregion with one of the lowest levels of mobile internet penetration in the world—to identify the main factors that limit mobile broadband internet adoption. Results show that low levels of household consumption and the price of mobile services are two key constraints. A one standard deviation increase in household expenditure, about US$65 per capita per month, is associated with a 6.5% point rise in the probability of adoption, while a one standard deviation drop in the price of mobile internet services (as a share of per capita household expenditure), about 5.5% points, raises the probability of adoption by 2.4% points. Other determinants include demographic characteristics (sex, age, language, urban location), socioeconomic features (educational attainment, sector of employment), and other factors linked to policy (access to electricity, ownership of assets, alternative means of internet access). Results are robust to specifications focusing only on areas with mobile internet coverage (3G).

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