International Food Policy Research Institute
IFPRI Home About Contact Careers Search  
Publications
IFPRI Publications 2020 Publications Search our Database Articles & Book Chapters Datasets Other Languages Order Form AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Cover ImageIssue Brief No. 40
ICTs: Information and Communication Technologies for the Poor
Maximo Torero and Joachim von Braun
November 2005
Summary

We live in the age of information. The development and proliferation of electronically communicated information has accelerated economic and social change across all areas of human activity worldwide—and it continues to do so at a rapid pace.While the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) remains concentrated largely in the developed world, ICT diffusion is beginning to reach developing countries, including poor rural areas, bringing with it high hopes of positive development outcomes. Yet although technological innovations, such as cellular telephones and wireless broadband access, are playing an important role in building ICT levels globally, strong inequality still remains. The rapid growth of ICTs in developing countries is partly a result of very low initial access, and therefore in absolute terms developing countries are still well behind the developed world in access to ICTs.

Download

Full Text
Related Book

See also the related book, Information and Communication Technologies for Development and Poverty Reduction

Send Feedback

We will post selected comments on this website. Please see our feedback guidelines for more information. Your e-mail address is required, but on request will not be posted.

Please use this form only for comments on this publication. To order a copy of the publication, please fill out the order form. For general comments on the website, use our website feedback form.

E-mail:
Post email address    Do Not Post email address
Comments:
    

TOP of the page