According to the World Data Lab, NIGERIA has the largest number of poor Internet people in the world according to the Internet Poverty Index.
According to the index, 47.39 percent (103.02 million people) of Nigeria’s 217.37 million population suffer from Internet poverty. 1.39 billion people will be suffering from Internet poverty in 2022.
51.43 percent (714.79 million) of those living in Internet poverty live in Nigeria, India, China, Congo (DRC), Brazil, Pakistan, Philippines, Tanzania, Indonesia, and South Africa, 169 countries were ranked.
According to the data enterprise, Internet access is increasingly viewed as a basic requirement, alongside access to food, clothing, housing, and energy.
It stated that the ability to measure Internet poverty could raise awareness and identify the most vulnerable groups.
It said, “Internet poverty is measured by how many people can or cannot afford a minimum mobile internet package.
“Moreover, it is based on three assumed pillars: affordability, quantity, and quality. Affordability, where up to 10 percent of total individual spending is assumed. Quantity, where 1GB per month is assumed. Quality, where 10Mbps download speed is assumed.
“The hedonic pricing method is used to assess mobile internet prices around the world, based on Internet quality and a set of socioeconomic variables. The variable of internet quality is fixed to project the cost of 1GB of mobile internet at that quality globally.
“These numbers are then combined with individual spending distributions to calculate the number of people who have the ability to afford that package of mobile internet (including up to 10 per cent of total individual spending).”
According to the Nigerian Communications Commission, the nation’s broadband penetration was 40.91 percent (78.08 million) in February 2022.
In its ‘A Better Future for All Nigerians: 2022 Nigeria Poverty Assessment’ report, the World Bank disclosed that poor Nigerians are projected to hit 95.1 million in 2022.
It said, “Given the effects of the crisis, however, the poverty headcount rate is instead projected to jump from 40.1 percent in 2018/19 to 42.0 percent in 2020 and 42.6 percent in 2022, implying that the number of poor people was 89.0 million in 2020 and would be 95.1 million in 2022.
“Taking the difference between these two scenarios, the crisis alone is projected to have driven an additional 3.8 million Nigerians into poverty in 2020, with an additional 5.1 million living in poverty by 2022.”