The developing countries in South Asia have seen a tremendous growth in mobile
services. Experts have enlisted several areas in which mobile applications can
be used to have a direct impact on the lives of rural people. This article by
Upasna Kakroo explores the topic of M-Services in rural communities in greater
detail.
The developing countries in South Asia have seen a tremendous growth in mobile
services. Villagers beginning to buy mobile phones is indicative of an explosive
growth in mobile services in countries where the poorest people live. About 85%
of people who become new mobile subscribers everyday live in emerging markets,
according to the mobile phone industry body, the GSMA. China and India have become
leaders in the technology with the growth rate of 6 million mobiles per month
in India alone. One of the reasons for such a growth is also that it's easier
and faster to put in cellular towers than to put in land lines, and as a result,
cellular use is exploding. This growth though has been lopsided, often being limited
to bigger urban areas, essentially meaning that penetration in the rural and remote
locations has been limited.
Bridging the divide
Making various communication technologies relevant to people on the wrong side
of this glaring digital divide is basically about providing information and knowledge
services, which are related to their livelihood. After all, for what would a small-scale
farmer in India, Bangladesh or Pakistan want a mobile phone? Market information.
Timely knowledge about who is buying potatoes today, what the buyers are willing
to pay and where they are located can be vitally important to those who are just
getting by. Computer and other ICTs are relatively expensive and not widespread
in these parts and they also require the users to be literate - more importantly
e-Literate. However, mobile phone connectivity with its ease of use is easily
adoptable and in nations plagued by connectivity lapses, this technology may well
emerge as the key to bridging the divide.
The growth of mobile phones could rake in benefits of ICTs to poor
people rapidly. The CPE has come down drastically making it suitable for mass
usage. However in most areas around South Asia, people have never had any connectivity
and in places where people have all the time but no money, it is not easy to ‘sell’
the concept of mobiles. Rural areas warrant an inherent need of connectivity
as well as the generation of specific mobile-based services, the appropriate selection
of which involves several points of consideration:
• Is the m-Service need based?
• Is it focused?
• Is it affordable?
If mobiles are only for providing communication services, it would be difficult
to find any direct poverty alleviation effect and hence the adoption rates may
not live upto expectations. Though, it’s well established that improving teledensity
provides more economic benefit than any other kind of infrastructure investment,
including roads, electricity and even education.
m-Services: Emerging Markets
Experts have enlisted several areas in which mobile applications can be used
to have a direct impact on the lives of rural people. These are mainly- Health
information, financial facilities, Business development services, m-Governance,
and Infotainment.
• Small and Medium Enterprises – Business Development- Small businesses in rural
areas often have to travel significant distances to markets or other places they
can distribute their goods, and cannot make arrangements in advance with buyers
or other sellers. Mobile phones could significantly change the logistical issues
faced by rural traders and home entrepreneurs, by affording mobile-based ordering
systems, delivery requests, and the ability to make more reliable and advance
arrangements with business partners or clients.
• m-Healthcare - New mobile services in this area could better connect rural
communities, creating networks to share and discuss health information and advice.
Several such systems are already under research.
• m-Governance - Accessing information about public services remains a major
challenge for many rural communities. Mobile phones provide a new platform through
which rural communities will be able to access government information and services,
using text, data, and audio browsing techniques.
• m-Learning - A range of educational services could be provided via mobiles
to children in remote villages and communities. Mobile phones could serve as an
essential means for children to become connected to one another for educational
and peer-learning activities. These are particularly important for communities
that are either nomadic or transitional on account of displacements due to a natural
disaster etc.
• m-Banking - m-Banking might help to serve the three billion people who currently
have no access to financial services, according to the World Bank. Mobile phones
are already being used in rural areas as a tool for financial transactions by
swapping airtime for goods and services. Mobile networks and financial services
institutions could work together to test and develop new financial services in
this area and address how people can transfer these credits into cash.
• Entertainment - While the mainstream entertainment industry is already well
aware of the emerging potential of mobile media, there are also many opportunities
for local, peer-to-peer content to be created and distributed, affording new cultural
and economic opportunities to rural communities.

Image Credit: Sayalee Joshi, Mobile Development Report, eAsia, Malaysia, 2007
m-Services: Innovative practices
Several techniques have been tried out in an attempt to innovate and make m-Services
suited to the needs of rural people. One such technique has been devised in Bangladesh
wherein the concept of a “mobile lady” has been floated. The mobile lady with
mobile phone in hand goes from door-to-door in villages for making poor people
access livelihood advices through advisers at help desks. The earnings from the
“help line” services have been deemed enough to cover both fixed and variable
costs and have been observed to be financially viable for the mobile lady. However,
the financial viability problem for the help desk has not been resolved. It is
important to note that without sustainability of the help desk, help line model’s
sustainability will not matter in the long run. This experimentation in livelihood
contents has been making an impact on the livelihood of the poor people in rural
Bangladesh since 2003. As the mobile lady moves door-to-door, the delivery of
services and promotion takes place simultaneously. Generally, across the globe,
it is difficult to make people come to the telecentres or knowledge centres, as
it is a matter of behavioral change of the people, which takes longer time. This
approach has solved the problem of mind shifting of the rural people. Much like
the mobile-lady, rural entrepreneurs have been encouraged all over South Asia
to start up rural mobile phone centres with the help of micro-finance institutes
which provide loans to these people for the initial capital expenditure.
Such an approach has also been started in rural areas in India where farmer helpline
numbers, accessible through mobile phones, are provided for, by advisers moving
across fields, encouraging farmers to make calls using the mobile devices. This
model has seen moderate success. Meanwhile, some farmers are able to receive better
prices for their crops because they have access to information on market prices,
primarily via mobile phones. And new technology is allowing the local villagers
to sell mobile phone time to the poor in even smaller units - through prepay top-ups
that are done through phone-to-phone links rather than using cards
As mentioned before, apart from the major towns, mobile coverage has remained
fragmented and this has been in-part because the electricity network, used to
power the mobile network infrastructure, is often unreliable and does not cover
the whole of the country. For instance, one third of Indian homes are not connected
to the power grid and demand for mobile phones is growing rapidly. A pilot scheme
has been started in India, wherein mobile firms hope to overcome some of these
problems by using mobile base stations that use generators running on biodiesel.
Crops will be used to generate biodiesel to fuel mobile base stations.
m-Services: Impact Assessment
An enormous number of people, including taxi drivers and tradesmen, now rely
on mobile phones to run their small businesses. The mobile phone boom has transformed
ordinary people into micro-entrepreneurs.
According to ethnographic research results based on counterfactual samples taken
in these areas a marked change in the business of the individuals has been observed.
Results reveal that due to the usage of mobile devices, accessing market information
becomes possible for these people. Critical economic information becomes available
immediately. Travel across long distances decreases or is optimized. Transport
is easier to coordinate and is used more efficiently and is optimized by sharing
or distributing its costs. Remote management and coordination of resources at
multiple sites and maintaining remote client relationships is possible. Access
to new clientele without having to be physically co-located is feasible. Given
more leisure time, a tighter business network, and critical market information,
new sources of revenue can be explored.
Increased mobile phone usage has had a socio-psychological change amongst users.
Studies show that users perceive themselves to have entered the modern public
sphere creating scopes to get access to information, services and the scope to
participate in up-streaming of information. They become contactable, locatable,
and traceable for institutions contributing to improve livelihood. They perceive
enhancements to their credibility and creditworthiness. Family relationships and
social networks also have a marked positive effect. Greater individualization
and disintegration from the family structure occurs and increased privacy of communications
and autonomy of actions is seen. Users are better able to maintain long distance
ties with a decreased dependency on proximal, local relationships.
The Way Ahead…
Despite success however mobile-phone based service delivery systems have had
a number of limitations-
• Lack of a number of services: Generally only help-line and commercial phone
services are available so far in these countries through the mobile phones;
• Financial Sustainability: the mobile phone service and equipment charges have
been reducing, so there is threat to the financial viability and the ARPU is low.
This has also meant that service providers have not catered to traditionally or
shown interest in such areas.
• Lack of local content: local content generation is not an easy task as traditionally
these areas have lacked services directed towards them and there is a lack of
inbuilt local interest amongst the people. The content could be made available
through the mobile phone although it is not convenient for the users, as the screen
is very small.
• National Policies: Even though most nations have recognized the power of mobiles,
the policies still favour traditional service providers and efforts have to be
put in so that they are made development centric and conducive to the needs of
the rural masses.
The path however is clear, the importance of ICTs to the population in the rural
and remote areas is undeniable. Several new business models are being developed
which can increase the penetration levels of mobiles and can also help benefit
the masses in a manner most suited to them. The challenge is to learn from the
success and the failures to move ahead!

The author - Upasna Kakroo (upasna.kakroo @ gmail.com) |