Broadband Internet Speeds 2009-2010: The Top 10 Countries
April 15th, 2010 | by Anil |
The results of the second annual global study on the quality of broadband connections done at end of 2009 reveal that 62 out of the 66 countries analyzed had improved the quality of consumer broadband services since last year. However, new data from the study highlights the extent of the digital quality divide between urban and rural areas and, for the first time, compares the quality of fixed and mobile broadband services.
The first groundbreaking Broadband Quality Study was published in September 2008 to highlight each country’s ability to benefit from next-generation web applications and services. The research team found that broadband quality is linked to a nation’s advancement as a knowledge economy and countries with broadband on their national agenda had the highest broadband quality. This year’s report covers an additional 24 countries and includes new analysis on broadband quality in more than 240 cities.
Highlights / Key Facts:
- Overall average broadband quality increased across the globe:
- Global average download throughput increased by 49% to 4.75 Megabits per second (Mbps)
- Global average upload throughput increased by 69% to 1.3 Mbps
- Global average latency decreased by 21% to 170 milliseconds
- South Korea tops the 2009 Broadband Leadership table.
|
|
|
Broadband Penetration (% of households) |
Broadband Quality Score 2009 |
Broadband Leadership 2009 |
|
1 |
South Korea |
97% |
66 |
139 |
|
2 |
Japan |
64% |
64 |
115 |
|
3 |
Hong Kong |
99% |
33 |
111 |
|
4 |
Sweden |
69% |
57 |
110 |
|
5 |
Switzerland |
90% |
40 |
108 |
|
6 |
Netherlands |
83% |
46 |
108 |
|
7 |
Singapore |
96% |
32 |
107 |
|
8 |
Luxembourg |
99% |
27 |
107 |
|
9 |
Denmark |
82% |
45 |
106 |
|
10 |
Norway |
84% |
38 |
102 |
- South Korea rose just above last year’s broadband quality leader Japan with a 72% improvement in its Broadband Quality Score (BQS). This improvement has been driven by continuous efforts by the government to strengthen the country’s position as one of the world’s ICT leaders. Combined with higher broadband penetration, South Korea rises above Japan in the global Broadband Leadership rankings.
- Japan stands out as having the cities with the highest BQS in the world, with Yokohama and Nagoya leading the BQS rankings and Sapporo not far behind.
- Sweden has the highest quality broadband internet in Europe. It is rapidly catching up with Japan and South Korea as its BQS improves 38% from 2008. Sweden is the most successful country in closing the broadband quality gap with residents outside the most populated cities enjoying better quality than those in the cities.
- Lithuania, Bulgaria and Latvia come just behind Sweden in quality boosted by recent city-based fibre rollouts and cable improvements but low broadband penetration means these countries have yet to break into the broadband leaders’ category.
- 39 countries have a BQS above the threshold required to deliver a consistent quality of experience for the most common web applications today, such as social networking, streaming low-definition video, web communications and sharing small files such as photos and music.
- Nine countries, South Korea, Japan, Sweden, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Latvia, The Netherlands, Denmark and Romania, were found to have the broadband quality required for future web applications, such as high definition Internet TV viewing and high-quality video communications (such as home telepresence) that will become mainstream in the next 3 to 5 years. In 2008, only Japan exceeded this threshold.
- The research compares countries according to their stage of economic development :
- Amongst the developed, innovation-driven economies, South Korea achieved the greatest improvement in broadband quality over the past year with a 73% increase in BQS. Sweden, the USA and the Czech Republic also saw significant above average improvements.
- Amongst efficiency-driven economies, Bulgaria topped the most improved list with a 57% increase in BQS from 2009. Lithuania, Romania and Latvia also achieved above average improvements.
- Amongst factor-driven economies, Kenya actually trebled its BQS but the overall score for Kenya remains well below the threshold required for today’s applications. Vietnam and Qatar followed Kenya as having made the most progress in broadband quality for countries in this stage of economic development.
- The cities with the highest BQS of all the countries in the study were:
| Top 10 Cities | BQS | Next 10 Cities | BQS |
| Yokohama, Japan | 85 | Rotterdam, The Netherlands | 55 |
| Nagoya, Japan | 82 | Riga, Latvia | 54 |
| Kaunas, Lithuania | 79 | Copenhagen, Denmark | 53 |
| Sapporo, Japan | 72 | Bucharest, Romania | 52 |
| Seoul, South Korea | 68 | Stockholm, Sweden | 51 |
| Malmo, Sweden | 67 | Vilnius, Lithuania | 50 |
| Osaka, Japan | 65 | Zurich, Switzerland | 49 |
| Wuhan, China | 60 | Tokyo, Japan | 49 |
| Uppsala, Sweden | 57 | Goteborg, Sweden | 49 |
| Sofia, Bulgaria | 56 | Kosice, Slovakia | 48 |
- The research team compared the difference between the BQS in the most populated cities with the BQS in the rest of the country. Although a digital quality divide was found in the majority of countries, 13 countries showed significant differences in BQS between its major cities and the rest of the country. Lithuania, Russia and Latvia had the biggest digital quality divide, while rural residents in Sweden, United Arab Emirates and Iceland enjoyed similar, if not slightly higher quality broadband services than their city counterparts.
- The country with the highest broadband quality outside of its major cities was Japan, followed by Korea and Sweden.
- The study also included data on the quality of mobile broadband services for the first time. On average, mobile devices connecting to WiFi services meet the broadband quality threshold required for today’s mobile Internet applications. The average BQS of 3G and 3G+ technologies do not currently meet the threshold due to low upload throughput.


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32 Responses to “Broadband Internet Speeds 2009-2010: The Top 10 Countries”
By Seanchk on May 11, 2010 | Reply
Seeing this makes me regret moving from Hong Kong to Thailand, in HK I had really good broadband, whereas in Bangkok I barely get 10kbytes a sec on downloads.
By pc maintenance software on May 13, 2010 | Reply
great info. global internet is now going wider and it can affect more on people interest.
By Alexander Hall on May 25, 2010 | Reply
Broadband internet these days are getting much faster and cheaper too. ,*’
By Akhabue Aminu on May 29, 2010 | Reply
Why is there no improvement in the African region?
By Matthew Anderson on Jun 29, 2010 | Reply
everyone wants fast broadband internet these days, i got some 5 mbps connection at home.`*;
By Lola Allen on Aug 29, 2010 | Reply
broadband internet these days are dirt cheap, there are more and more broadband companies offering cheap service too`:.
By Rishil on Sep 7, 2010 | Reply
Nice info.. India nowhere insight
By Autumn Washington on Oct 7, 2010 | Reply
the nice thing about broadband internet is that it gets cheaper each year***
By Paryash on Oct 11, 2010 | Reply
Hi Anil,
how are you. i liked your Articles and was wondering will you alow me to pulish your article on my website. My website is an online news portal that mainly focuses on Indians living in Australia. I will provide full credit to your article.
Thank You.
Regards
Paryash
By Audio Power Amplifiers : on Oct 31, 2010 | Reply
broadband services these days are getting and cheaper and faster too, very soon we would have an affordable Gigabit internet ~
By Necklace Holder on Nov 24, 2010 | Reply
most broadband services are crappy, they can’t maintain high data transfer rates “;’
By iZoC on Nov 25, 2010 | Reply
Malaysia’s broadband is very expensive, it’s monopoly by a government related company.
Malaysian earns RM2000 per month
1Mbps = RM 99
Singaporien earns SG$2000 per month
1Mbps = SG$30+
By Delfim Rocha on Dec 26, 2010 | Reply
I cant help commenting this news. I live in Portugal and I have a 50mb broadband. It realy works at 50Mbps. So where is Portugal on the rank ? Do people still think that Portugal, a country with 900 years old, is part of spain ?
By Arifayan Daniel on Jan 18, 2011 | Reply
Technology will soon get to a state that “it will be as fast as light”
By Martin Jensen on Jan 22, 2011 | Reply
Delfim Rocha: This is statistics, so I don’t think they are concerned with anything else than measuring the connection speed and quality in all countries.
I live in Denmark btw which is in the top 10, and I only got a 25 Mbit connection since I don’t want no more than that. I could easily hit 50 and I’d max it out by 111 Mbit, but that is just too much!
By JC on Feb 23, 2011 | Reply
Yep Australia’s Internet is still shit, overpriced and pathetic… We have a service called nextG. I had an American guy say to me it’s so god damn slow, they should call it next-gee when is it gonna load. The provider also tells us they have 99% coverage…. Well until you drive out of the city limits. I have a friend in Europe who’s says they can download a full movie in about 3 minutes… Forget that here it takes at least 4 hours.
By petchimuthu on Mar 23, 2011 | Reply
THIS OPTION IS VERY NICE
By blake williams on Jun 10, 2011 | Reply
Are these all based on ADSL services? Are Cable TV added in. It would be nice to see if they are ADSL based, how much is owned by the government.
By Raju Mondal on Aug 15, 2011 | Reply
what about our..india….here average speed is 10 kbps. just think.
By Clayton Clay on Sep 14, 2011 | Reply
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