02/12/2010

UK Consumers Revealed As Early Adopters Of New Technologies

UK consumers are some of the earliest adopters of new communications technologies, new Ofcom research reveals.

They are among the best connected for broadband, mobile and digital TV and the UK has seen the fastest growth in smartphone take-up. UK consumers are also enjoying lower prices for communications services than many consumers across the world.

Ofcom’s fifth International Communications Market report into the global communications market looks at take-up, availability and use of broadband, landlines, mobiles, TV and radio in 17 countries.

Take-up of communications services across the world is continuing at a rapid pace, despite the global recession. Ofcom’s consumer research reveals that across the six countries it surveyed, expenditure on communications services remains resilient with people less likely to cut down on communications services, and in particular broadband (6-7 per cent), than they are on other areas such as nights out (39-56 per cent) or holidays (29-51 per cent).

UK households have comparatively high levels of take-up of communications services, with among the highest take-up of landlines, fixed broadband connections, mobile connections and digital TV at the end of 2009.

Germany has the highest landline take-up with 85 per cent of the population having a landline (84 per cent in the UK). Italy has the highest mobile take-up with 95 per cent of the population owning a mobile phone (91 per cent in the UK), and the Netherlands has the highest fixed broadband take-up (85 connections per 100 households, 70 in UK).

However the UK is behind other countries in take-up of VoIP services with only five subscribers for every 100 people, compared with 26 in France and 20 in the Netherlands. Although the UK did see an average 27 per cent annual increase in VoIP subscribers between 2006 and 2009. VoIP services tend to be more popular in countries where there is high demand for international calls or where broadband is available to consumers without the need for a landline services (also known as naked DSL).

(BMcN/GK)


Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

08 July 2011
Protected Investment In UK Businesses Worth £65bn Per Year
Reports published today show that investments made by businesses in products and services that are protected by intellectual property rights (IPRs) are worth £65 billion a year. The announcement was made by Minister for Intellectual Property, Baroness Wilcox.
23 May 2006
Nottingham tops crime survey
Nottingham has been named as the most crime-ridden place in England and Wales in a new survey. According to a report by independent think tank, Reform, Nottingham has nearly four times as many crimes as Southend in Essex and Poole in Dorset, the towns at the bottom of the table.
05 September 2005
UK fuel prices rise sharply
Forecourt prices for petrol and diesel in the UK are continuing to rise sharply in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, which swept through the oil producing region of the Gulf of Mexico. The average UK petrol price has reached around 95 pence per litre for petrol (£4.27 per gallon) and in some cases motorists have reported being charged over £1.
27 April 2005
Migrant workers contribute more taxes, research claims
Immigrants in the UK contribute relatively more taxes than UK-born workers, new research has claimed. Research conducted by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) found that total revenue generated from immigrant workers grew in real terms from £33.8 billion in 1999-00 to £41.
29 April 2003
BP posts record first-quarter profits
BP's first-quarter results have revealed record profits, as the war in Iraq and political instability in two other oil producing countries forced up oil prices. The results showed a $3.73 billion profit in three months, exceeding the previous best quarterly profit posted in 2001.