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Pakistan scored low in mobile broadband infrastructure despite high use by subscribers, as the country scored 2.09 out of 10, ranking 25 out of 26 developing telecom markets in mobile broadband connectivity. This was revealed in a Nokia sponsored study's results shared at Nokia's conference titled "Connected Pakistan-3G, 4G Perspectives" held here on Monday.
For measuring the score, the study titled "Connectivity Scorecard 2013" took into account key criteria such as consumer infrastructure, consumer usage and skills, business infrastructure and business usage and skills, public sector infrastructure and public sector usage and skills, to measure the level of mobile broadband connectivity in Pakistan.
Danny Atme, General Manager, Networks, Nokia Pakistan, said the study showed mobile broadband users in Pakistan increasingly demand high-speed mobile broadband and significantly improved network coverage across the country. "As the world's specialist in mobile broadband, we are committed to providing operators in Pakistan with our advanced 3G and 4G technologies, and comprehensive services to build and run the networks cost efficiently."
The number of WCDMA subscriptions in Pakistan will overtake GSM subscriptions by 2019, and there will be 103.4 million WCDMA subscriptions in Pakistan by the end of 2019, representing about 58 percent of the mobile market, according to Ovum forecasts. It also forecasts that the adoption of 4G will be more modest than for 3G for the foreseeable future, with the number of LTE subscriptions in Pakistan reaching about 6.6 million by the end of 2019.
Dr Syed Ismail Shah, Chairman, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), said Nokia conference had brought out excellent insights from various eco-system players on how to achieve further mobile broadband penetration here. The government is committed to enabling the operators to take the mobile broadband subscription base to a new high. Together with players such as Nokia and its advanced 3G and 4G mobile broadband technologies, we are confident that Pakistan will be able to provide high quality mobile broadband services on par with leading services around the world.
Matthew Reed, Practice Leader Middle East and Africa, Ovum, said although Pakistan was a late-comer to mobile broadband, the rollout of 3G services that was now underway following the recent award of new licenses, combined with the increasing affordability of 3G-enabled devices as well as demand for Internet access and other data services, meant that there was likely to be a substantial shift in Pakistan's mobile market from 2G to 3G over the coming few years.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2014

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