Mauritius Is the Most Mature African Telecoms Market: BuddeComm
The 2019 Africa Telecoms Maturity Index by BuddeComm ranks Mauritius as Africa's most mature market followed by Algeria and South Africa.
Mauritius remains the most mature African country when it comes to telecoms, according to the 2019 Africa Telecoms Maturity Index by BuddeComm.
The Australian research company's Telecoms Maturity Index analyses the broadband, mobile and fixed line markets of a country as well as a range of economic parameters to rank it on a scale of one to 100 and compares it to its region. All countries are placed into one of three categories - market leaders, market challengers or developing nations - according to their index score.
In terms of market leaders, the new index placed Mauritius in first place, with a score of 49, while Algeria and South Africa moved up into second and third place with scores of 43 and 34 respectively. In 2018, Mauritius was also number one but Ghana ranked second with a score of 34 and Tunisia third with a score of 31.
Africa Telecoms Maturity Index vs. GDP per capita (chart courtesy of BuddeComm)
According to the index, in Mauritius the thriving tourism market has stimulated the broadband sector. The island nation has extensive DSL infrastructure and operators have deployed fiber-based services in a number of locations, according to BuddeComm.
In Algeria, mobile penetration approaches 116% and mobile Internet accounts for about 92% of all Internet connections in the country. Algeria's biggest mobile operator by market share, Mobilis, has also reportedly partnered with Huawei for its network migration to 5G.
In South Africa, mobile penetration by early 2019 approached 169%, driven partly by the popularity of multiple SIM card usage and also by the take-up of mobile broadband services. Mobile Internet accounts for about 95% of all Internet connections n South Africa, BuddeComm says.
In the market challenger category, Libya came out highest with a score of 23 followed by Lesotho with 20.5 and Zimbabwe with 20.2. Developing nations in Africa included Burundi with a score of 9.4, Uganda scoring 9.3 and Nigeria with 9.1.
— The Staff, Connecting Africa