Data InsightsMany countries are “leapfrogging” landlines and going straight to mobile phones

Many countries are “leapfrogging” landlines and going straight to mobile phones

Small multiple line charts of mobile and landline phone subscriptions per 100 people from 1960 to 2023 for the United States, United Kingdom, Ghana, and Nigeria, where mobiles and landlines are plotted separately. The US and UK show landlines dominant until mobiles overtake in the early 2000s. Ghana and Nigeria show almost no landline adoption and rapid, explosive growth in mobile subscriptions.

The concept of “leapfrogging” is popular in development. It suggests that, as they develop, lower-income countries can skip intermediate technologies or systems and go straight to the modern equivalent.

One example of this is the use of landlines and mobile phones.

The landline telephone was invented in 1876 and became a dominant form of communication across Europe and North America. As you can see in the chart, it was increasingly adopted in the United States and the United Kingdom throughout the 20th century.

However, mobile phone adoption increased rapidly in the 1990s, and landlines have declined since the millennium. Mobile phones have become a substitute.

But many countries have almost skipped landline adoption entirely. Ghana and Nigeria are good examples: landline subscriptions have remained extremely low, and instead, mobile phone adoption has exploded.

Explore landline and mobile subscriptions in more countries.

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