No
matter what part of the world you live in, communication is a vital
aspect of everyday life facilitating connection between people. The use
of phones has evolved from interactions with friends and family to tools
that enable commercial transactions for businesses. In Tanzania, the
highest rate of mobile phone penetration is in urban areas however 67.6%
of the population resides in rural areas where connectivity remains a
challenge.
A
Deloitte study of 40 African economies reveals that the introduction of
mobile networks has the potential to influence socio-economic
development for individuals and villages in remote areas. Additionally,
the study shows that 1% increase in market penetration leads to an
increase of 0.28 percentage points in GDP and 1% increase in internet
penetration increases the GDP growth rate by 0.077 percentage points in
the economy.
We
live in a world where a person in the southern highlands of Tanzania
needs to be able to access breaking news as it happens from his mobile
phone and also have the ability to use the same phone to source
commercial opportunities in other parts of Tanzania. Without enabling
rural access it would take a long time for information to reach people
in rural areas thus hindering their progress.
According
to FinScope Tanzania 2017, 78% of Tanzanian adults in rural areas have a
financial access point within a 5km radius. Due to the limited
footprint of traditional bank branches, the majority of financial
service providers found within a 5km radius are mobile money agents
whose presence facilitate transactions that allow for residents to
participate in economic activities that improve their livelihoods. Rural connectivity empowers the lives of those that reside great distances from urban centers.
Vodacom
Tanzania PLC, the leading telecommunications company in the country,
has been at the forefront of advancing rural connectivity and has
demonstrated its commitment by supporting the government in its
objectives to bridge the digital divide by progressing connectivity to
over 60% of the population that resides in the rural areas in order to
unlock the economic potential that lies in the rural areas. The Telco
has been at the forefront ensuring that all Tanzanians have access to
communication. The company currently covers over 75 % of the connected
population with a bouquet of technologies ranging from GSM 900/1800, 3G
and WiMAX 803.16d.
The
future is promising for rural connectivity in Tanzania - Vodacom
recently entered into a long term contract with The National ICT
Broadband Backbone (NICTBB) that allows the former to use
government-owned fiber optic cable infrastructure to enhance
connectivity in rural Tanzania. With
increasing demand for information services, Vodacom will use the
government infrastructure to meet customer needs as fiber optics cables
can carry larger amounts of information over a longer distance helping
bridge the technological disparities of rural areas.
Additionally,
through an agreement with Universal Communication Service Access Fund
(UCSAF), Vodacom has set out to improve basic telecom services to the
most rural villages and underserved urban areas in Tanzania. Under this
agreement, 194 new sites have been added reaching 187 wards in Tanzania
providing access to communication and internet services to improve the
socio-economic standing of 654 new villages in Tanzania.
Schools
in those remote villages can now connect to the internet and share
ideas with others far away, farmers can quickly check prices of produce
and make informed decisions on trading. Mwanahamisi,
a woman trader in Mtwara remarks, ‘it is now so easy for me to talk to
the company in Mozambique that buys my rosella products. I don’t have to
keep crossing the border.’
Connectivity
also enables the transfer of critical health data and life-saving
information by text messages to clinics to support rapid diagnoses for
patients in remote villages.Although
the socio-economic benefits are vast, the deployment of rural access
services remains a challenge due to the required investment to ensure
that broadband services are not only deployed but also remain
sustainable.
In
order for rural connectivity to be realized, key conditions have to be
met: partnerships between the private and public sector, roll out of
projects that provide high-speed network access, and the provision of
friendly regulatory frameworks. These strategies lie at the heart of
providing an enhanced and holistic service to potential customers in the
rural areas of Tanzania.
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