Brazil Spends 8% of GDP in Communications, But It’s Still Too Little

Between 1998 and 2004, the countries of Latin America advanced in the field of information technology, but there are still chasms to be bridged.

This information was provided by João Carlos Ferraz, director of Productive and Entrepreneurial Development of the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), and is part of a study conducted by the organ.


According to the study, in terms of stationary telephones per 100 inhabitants, the number in Latin America rose from 0.20 in 1998 to 0.30 in 2004. The number of cell phones per 100 inhabitants in the region grew from 16 to 45 during the period.


In terms of Internet users per 100 thousand inhabitants, Latin America went from 0.07 to 0.28, and the number of Internet users per stationary telephone increased from 32 to 90.


The conclusion, Ferraz said, is that Latin American countries are changing, that is, the region’s developing countries are seeking means and initiatives to promote digital and social inclusion, but they still run up against the problem of income, which is small for the purchase of these more sophisticated technological goods.


The ratio between per capita income and spending on telephone services shows that, in percentage terms, Brazil is similar to countries like France and the Netherlands, for example.


“It’s just that the 8% of the GDP that Brazil spends on information and communications technology represents an average per capita outlay of US$ 600 to US$ 700 on ICT (information and communications technology), while in France these expenditures come to US$ 2.5 thousand for each inhabitant.”


Since yesterday, the forms of convergence in the region to make it easier for the population to have access to the new technologies are being debated at the Gloria Hotel, in Rio, during the Latin American and Caribbean Ministerial Conference.


The meeting is in preparation for the second phase of the World Summit on the Society of Information, which will be held in Tunisia in November. The Conference is being organized by the Brazilian government, with advisory support from the ECLAC.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s New Eletrobrí¡s Chief Wants to Go Global

AloÀ­sio Vasconcelos, who took office yesterday as the new president of Eletrobrás – Centrais ...

Brazzil, the U.S.A., and the FTAA

President Cardoso has to waste too much of his time just teaching his country’s ...

How the Anti-Zika Effort Perpetuates Sexism in Brazil and Latin America

In a New York Times article, foreign correspondent Azam Ahmed challenged his readers, asking, ...

Air France Jet Didn’t Explode, Says Brazil

Spread over more than 90 km (56 miles) of ocean debris from the crashed ...

Argentina Is Brazil’s Second Best Buyer and Seller

Brazil’s Secretary of Foreign Trade of the Ministry of Development, Industry, and Foreign Trade, ...

Brazilians Who Promote or Use Morning-After Pill Threatened with Excommunication

Brazil's Catholic Archbishop José Cardoso Sobrinho has condemned a plan by Recife city officials, ...

US Real-Estate Crisis Puts Big Dent on Brazil’s Wood Industry

Sales by the industry of Santa Catarina state in southern Brazil have accumulated a ...

Whew, Theft of Classified Data in Brazil Was Just an Inside Job!

Petrobras publicly announced two weeks ago (February 14) that it got burglarized. Brazil’s state-controlled giant ...

Brazil’s Domestic Debt Is Out of Control, Says Expert

In recent years Brazil’s foreign debt has been falling, while domestic debt has been ...

Disturbing Handcuffs Threaten Brazilian Media

As photos, the sequence is nearly run of the mill. A person in handcuffs ...