Government Broadband Index

The Government Broadband Index (gBBi) is a report compiled by the Economist Intelligence Unit that assesses countries on the basis of government planning, as opposed to current broadband capability. With ambitious targets for both the speed and coverage of next-generation broadband networks, the developed countries of East Asia scored highest in the Economist Intelligence Unit's first government broadband index.

According to the index Greece is the worst-performing country measured, owing to its relatively low coverage target and drawn-out deployment schedule. Greece also suffers due to the considerable size of its public-funding commitment as a percentage of overall government budget revenues, and because its plan does little to foment competition in the high-speed broadband market.[1]

Australia, with the most ambitious targets in the world for both speed and coverage, ranks in the bottom half of the index, because its National Broadband Network (NBN) program is partially funded by the Australian government and the rankings ignore plans to privatize the network in year 9. South Korea, by comparison, was also a government initiative 15 years ago but has now been privatized, hence its high ranking.

The report

Besides the actual gBBi, "Full speed ahead: The government broadband index Q1 2011" reviews over 40 national government plans for broadband development, with comparable metrics for more than 30 countries. Specifically, the report addresses the following questions:[2]

2011 rankings

The following table summarizes the ranking of the 2011 report. Scoring is on a scale of 0–5, with 5 being the best.[3]

No. Country Score
1  South Korea 4.4
2  Japan 4.3
3  Singapore 4.2
4  Sweden 4.1
5  Finland 4.1
6  Estonia 4.0
7  France 3.9
8  Spain 3.7
9  Netherlands 3.6
10  Australia 3.4
11  New Zealand 3.0
12  United States 3.0
13  Italy 2.9
14  United Kingdom 2.7
15  Germany 2.6
16  Greece 2.4

References

See also

External links

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