The
Country
Land and Business Association (CLA) has poured scorn on a
recent
survey from IT firm Cisco which said that while UK broadband speeds lag
behind other countries, they are currently fit for UK purposes.
Henry Aubrey-Fletcher, president of the association, which represents rural
business and communities, said rural areas all over the UK continue to suffer
from poor broadband connections.
His comments come just after the Government said it would press ahead with
introducing a £6 a year
broadband
tax on fixed telephone lines.
Revenue raised would be used to fund next-generation high-speed broadband for
areas that would not otherwise get this. This is because they are considered
commercially unviable by internet service providers.
The CLA welcomed these proposals but Mr Aubrey-Fletcher said it was nowhere
near enough to ensure rural areas would get high-speed services. And he said the
survey showed the Government still wasn’t doing enough to close this digital
divide.
“The survey says that the global download speed is 4.75Mbits/sec. This
highlights just how wrong our Government is in saying it wants to increase UK
broadband to speeds of up to 2Mbits/sec. It needs to recognise that the UK must
aim for up to 10Mbits/sec broadband speeds to compete globally,” he said.
The Cisco survey carried out jointly by
Oxford
University's Said Business School and Spain's
University
of Oviedo's Department of Applied Economics, put countries into four groups:
ready for tomorrow; comfortable for today; meeting needs for today; and below
needs for today.
It placed the UK 25th out of 66 countries in terms of quality and coverage.
But it found countries such as Latvia and Bulgaria were better prepared than the
UK for next-generation internet applications.
The UK was listed among countries whose broadband is 'meeting needs for
today'. South Korea and Japan continue to dominate the league table, largely due
to their commitment to fast networks.
However despite not being ready for future applications, the Cisco survey
said the UK was well placed to cope with today's network demands.
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