From Paul Fletcher MP, parliamentary secretary to Malcolm Turnbull - trends in mobile internet and telecoms
Tuesday, 16 June 2015
The trend to use mobile ever more heavily is continuing
Paul's Blog Monday, 15 June 2015The ever growing reliance of Australians on mobile communications is something I have commented on regularly in my blog.
Recent data shows that the trend to use mobile ever more heavily is continuing – and so too is the trend for more and more Australians to cut their fixed line services.
New research from the Australian Communications and Media Authority has found that 29% of Australian adults (5.2 million adults) are now mobile-only for voice calls, 21% (3.9 million) are mobile-only for internet use, and 12% - more than one in ten Australian adults – are now exclusively mobile for both voice calls and internet use. This equates to 2.1 million Australian adults without any fixed-line connection at all – up from 1.8 million Australians a year earlier.
Unsurprisingly, the trend to rely solely on a mobile is strongest amongst younger Australians. The highest proportion of mobile-only users were aged 25-34 (22% of the total), followed by 18-24 (16%) and 35-44 (12%). These age groups combined account for almost all of the growth in mobile-only users over the past year.
Mobile only users are more like to be found living alone, share-housing or boarding. On the other end of the spectrum, those least likely to be mobile-only are older age groups (only 3% of over 65 year-olds) and people living with a partner and children (only 9% of the total).
The heavy weighting of younger people is true for both people who are mobile-only for voice and those who are mobile-only for data. Of the 5.2 million who are mobile-only for voice calls, 54% are aged 25-34; of the 3.9 million who are mobile-only for internet, 28% are aged 25-34.
Another interesting fact included in the report is the high level of mobile and smartphone use amongst the homeless. The report pointed to a University of Sydney/ACCAN study which found that found that 95% of homeless people had a mobile phone, and 77% of this group used a smartphone.
Fixed line telephone services have been around for well over one hundred years; mobile for only about thirty years. But it is clear that in a growing section of the market mobile is shouldering aside fixed – as more and more people reply solely on mobile for voice and for data services.
It is a striking trend – and one that certainly looks to have some distance to run yet.