EU Citizens Are So Technophobic A Quarter Have Never Used The Web

God bless those Europeans: Across the EU, more than 120 million people have never been online. How do they cope without Facebook and YouTube?

In Romania, 54 per cent of the population have never used the Internet, whether via home access, at an internet cafe or over a smart phone, reports Reuters. In Bulgaria, Greece, Cyprus and Portugal, only half of homes have an internet connection. Across the entire EU, 24 per cent of 16-74 year olds across 27 countries — a population of 500 million people — have never accessed the Internet.

That is a pretty bleak situation in connectivity terms.

It’s not all bad news, though. In the Netherlands — Europe’s most connected country — 94 per cent of people have Internet access, and Luxembourg, Sweden and Denmark all have access rates of 90 per cent or above.

Because of the poor access to the internet in some countries, online retail has been slow to take off too. In Romania and Bulgaria, for instance, just 13 per cent of people have purchased items over the Internet. Compare that to 80 per cent in the UK, which has Europe’s most advanced online economy, and things look sad for those in Eastern Europe.

While the figures make for a good headline, what’s really worrying here is the disparity. By and large, its the poorest countries in the EU that come bottom in terms of connectivity — and there doesn’t seem to be much sign of the gulf narrowing. [Reuters; Image: eric.beasley]

Discuss

(3 Comments)
  • [–]

    MrTaco

    Friday, December 16, 2011 at 12:45 PM

    “How do they cope without Facebook and YouTube?”

    Good on ‘em, I say.

    • [–]

      WillD

      Monday, December 19, 2011 at 2:16 PM

      Because they don’t NEED FB and YT and all the other anti-social networking. They have normal lives, and communicate with real people that they actually know, rather than faceless ‘friends’ they don’t.

      They use the telephone, write letters, send postcards. Remember them?

      How any mature person can seriously believe that a country is worse off because it has less internet connectivity than another, is beyond me. I bet if you conducted a survey to find out if the population missed having the technology, or was unhappier than those who do have the technology, that the people without would be significantly happier.

      The happiest people I have met all over the world have very often been the poorest in material terms.

  • [–]

    cflow

    Friday, December 16, 2011 at 4:41 PM

    So it that a possible reflected reason why the EU is financially not as strong as it should be? Not investing in infrastructure and technology would limit the financial growth of most countries I would think.

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