Digital Pakistan 2022: Broadband Penetration Soars to 90% of 15+ Population

The year 2022 was a very rough year for Pakistan. The nation was hit by devastating floods that badly affected tens of millions of people. Macroeconomic indicators took a nose dive as political instability reached new heights. In the middle of such bad news, Pakistan saw installation of thousands of kilometers of new fiber optic cable, inauguration of a new high bandwidth PEACE submarine cable connecting Karachi with Africa and Europe, and millions of new broadband subscriptions. Broadband penetration among 140 million (59% of 236 million population) Pakistanis in  the15-64 years age group reached almost 90%. This new digital infrastructure helped grow technology adoption in the country. 

Internet and Mobile Phone Banking Growth in 2021-22. Source: State Bank of Pakistan

Fintech: 

Mobile phone banking and internet banking grew by 141.1% to Rs. 11.9 trillion while Internet banking jumped 81.1% to reach Rs10.2 trillion.  E-commerce transactions also accelerated, witnessing similar trends as the volume grew by 107.4% to 45.5 million and the value by 74.9% to Rs106 billion, according to the State Bank of Pakistan.  

Pakistan Startup Funding in 2022. Source: i2i Investing

Fintech startups continued to draw investments in the midst of a slump in venture funding in Pakistan. Fintech took $10 million from a total of $13.5 million raised by tech startups in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to the data of Invest2Innovate (i2i), a startups consultancy firm. In Q3 of 2022, six out of the 14 deals were fintech startups, compared to two deals of e-commerce startups. Fintech startups raised $38 million which is 58% of total funding ($65 million) in Q3 2022, compared to e-commerce startups that raised 19% of total funding. The i2i data shows that in Q3 2022, fintech raised 37.1% higher than what it raised in Q2 2022 ($27.7 million). Similarly, in Q2 2022, the total investment of fintech was 63% higher compared to what it raised in Q1 2022 ($17 million).

E-Commerce in Pakistan. Source: State Bank of Pakistan

E-Commerce:

E-commerce continued to grow in the country. Transaction volume soared 107.4% to 45.5 million while the value of transactions jumped 75% to Rs. 106 billion over the prior year, according to the State Bank of Pakistan. 

Pakistan Among World's Top 10 Smartphone Markets. Source: NewZoo

PEACE Cable: 

Pakistan and East Africa Connecting Europe (PEACE) cable, a  96 TBPS (terabits per second), 15,000 km long submarine cable, went live in 2022. It brought to 10 the total number of submarine cables currently connecting or planned to connect Pakistan with the world: TransWorld1, Africa1 (2023), 2Africa (2023), AAE1, PEACE,  SeaMeWe3, SeaMeWe4, SeaMeWe5, SeaMeWe6 (2025) and IMEWE. PEACE cable has two landing stations in Pakistan: Karachi and Gwadar. SeaMeWe stands for Southeast Asia Middle East Western Europe, while IMEWE is India Middle East Western Europe and AAE1 Asia Africa Europe 1. 

Mobile Data Consumption Growth in Pakistan. Source: ProPakistan

Fiber Optic Cable: 

The first phase of a new high bandwidth long-haul fiber network has been completed jointly by One Network, the largest ICT and Intelligent Traffic and Electronic Tolling System operator in Pakistan, and Cybernet, a leading fiber broadband provider.  The joint venture has deployed 1,800 km of fiber network along motorways and road sections linking Karachi to Hyderabad (M-9 Motorway), Multan to Sukkur (M-5 Motorway), Abdul Hakeem to Lahore (M-3 Motorway), Swat Expressway (M-16), Lahore to Islamabad (M-2 Motorway) and separately from Lahore to Sialkot (M-11 Motorway), Gujranwala, Daska and Wazirabad, according to Business Recorder newspaper.

Mobile telecom service operator Jazz and Chinese equipment manufacturer Huawei have commercially deployed FDD (Frequency Division Duplexing) Massive MIMO (Multiple Input and Output) solution based on 5G technology on a large scale in Pakistan. Jazz and Huawei claim it represents a leap into the 4.9G domain to boost bandwidth. 

Pakistan Telecom Indicators November 2022. Source: PTA

 

Pakistan's RAAST P2P System Taking Off. Source: State Bank of Pakistan

Broadband Subscriptions:

Pakistan has 124 million broadband subscribers as of November, 2022, according to Pakistan Telecommunications Authority.  Broadband penetration among 140 million (59% of 236 million) Pakistanis in 15-64 years age bracket is 89%.  Over 20 million mobile phones were locally manufactured/assembled in the country in the first 11 months of the year. 

Bank Account Ownership in Pakistan. Source: Karandaaz

Financial Inclusion Doubled In Pakistan in 5 Years. Source: Karandaaz

Documenting Pakistan Economy:

Pakistan's unbanked population is huge, estimated at 100 million adults, mostly women. Its undocumented economy is among the world's largest,  estimated at 35.6% which represents approximately $542 billion at GDP PPP levels, according to World Economics. The nation's tax to GDP ratio (9.2%) and formal savings rates (12.72%) are among the lowest. The process of digitizing the economy could help reduce the undocumented economy and increase tax collection and formal savings and investment in more productive sectors such as export-oriented manufacturing and services. Higher investment in more productive sectors could lead to faster economic growth and larger export earnings. None of this can be achieved without some semblance of political stability. 

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  • Riaz Haq

    Airtel is the new winner of Opensignal's Download Speed Experience award in India. Our users on Airtel clocked the fastest overall mobile download speeds in India — 13.6 Mbps, on average — which were 0.3-0.6 Mbps faster than the speeds users saw on Vi and Jio and 10.6 Mbps faster than on last-placed BSNL.

    https://www.opensignal.com/reports/2022/10/india/mobile-network-exp...

    ----------------

    With average download speeds of 11.4 Mbps, Zong users saw the fastest Download Speed Experience in Pakistan — 0.7 Mbps ahead of Jazz. The gap between Zong and other operators varied significantly, ranging from 19.3% with third-placed Ufone to a staggering 204.6% over the speeds experienced by our Telenor users. However, Ufone is faster in terms of 4G Download Speed, with scores averaging 15.7 Mbps.

    https://www.opensignal.com/reports/2022/08/pakistan/mobile-network-...

  • Riaz Haq

    Kalsoom Lakhani
    @kalsoom82
    1/Happy 2023! Our Insights team at
    @Invest2Innovate
    put out of a 2022 EOY roundup re: Pakistan startup funding space, a much deeper dive into what happened this past year that looks at overall trends. I'll give some broad takeaways but u can find it here:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1-Og0XefqLvdiQE3hnwApuuqJuneWj9JC/view

    In 2023, the funding slowdown will likely continue, though our belief is that good companies with
    strong business models (i.e., not burning lots of cash indefinitely) will still be able to raise in the
    coming year. Valuations will also go down to match the Pakistan market realities, which will be
    necessary given the waning international investor appetite. If you're a founder, focus on executing,
    and if you need to raise, be mindful that it may take longer than it would have in 2021.

  • Riaz Haq

    Global Innovation Index 2022


    https://www.wipo.int/edocs/pubdocs/en/wipo-pub-2000-2022-section3-e...


    Pakistan is a prominent climber in the GII 2022 ranking, entering the top 90 at 87th place.
    This year, Indonesia, Uzbekistan and Pakistan entered the group of Innovation Achievers
    for the first time by performing above expectation on innovation for their level of economic
    development (see Table 3 and Figure 11).
    Sixteen out of the 25 economies from Sub-Saharan Africa covered this year improved their
    ranking. Botswana took the biggest leap forward, reaching 86th position, and in so doing
    overtaking Kenya (88th) among the top 3 for the region. Other notable improvers within the
    region are Mauritius (45th), Ghana (95th), Namibia (96th) and Senegal (99th). South Africa remains
    unchanged in 61st place – and continuing to fail to improve consistently over time.

    -----------
    Middle-income economies China, Türkiye and India continue to change the
    innovation landscape; others like the Islamic Republic of Iran and Indonesia show
    promising potential
    Apart from group leaders China, Bulgaria and Malaysia, Türkiye (37th) and India (40th) are the two
    other middle-income economies to make it into the top 40. Thailand (43rd), Mauritius (45th), the
    Russian Federation (47th), Viet Nam (48th) and Romania (49th) make into the top 50, but with only
    Mauritius moving up the ranking this year.
    Among the middle-income group, the Islamic Republic of Iran (53rd) and Indonesia (75th) have
    notably improved their ranking, not only this year but also over the past decade, and join Türkiye,
    Viet Nam and the Philippines (59th) in having an increasingly important potential for transforming
    the global innovation landscape.
    Morocco (67th) has shown innovation potential for a number of years, whereas Pakistan (87th) and
    Cambodia (97th) are also starting to show signs of increased innovation potential.
    India overtakes Viet Nam as leader of the lower middle-income group (Table 2). It continues to lead
    the world in the ICT services exports indicator (1st) and hold top rankings in other indicators, including
    Venture capital recipients’ value (6th), Finance for startups and scaleups (8th), Graduates in science and
    engineering (11th), Labor productivity growth (12th) and Domestic industry diversification (14th).

    ------

    However, there is change too this year. Indonesia (75th), Uzbekistan (82nd) and Pakistan (87th) are
    Innovation Achievers in 2022 for the first time ever. For these three economies, this achievement
    coincides with an important shift in their rankings of between four and 12 positions. In addition,
    Jamaica (76th), Jordan (78th), Zimbabwe (107th), Mozambique (123rd) and Burundi (130th) all make it
    back into the select group of Innovation Achievers for 2022. Brazil (54th), the Islamic Republic of
    Iran (53rd) and Peru (65th) keep their achiever status for a second consecutive year. These three
    economies also gain between three and seven positions in the rankings, with Brazil moving
    forward since 2019. In 2022, Brazil makes marked improvements in innovation outputs, notably in
    Creative outputs, including in Intangible assets and Online creativity, as well as in the indicators
    Trademarks (19th) and Mobile app creation (34th).


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    Relative to 2021, 27 economies switched performance groups. Four economies raised their performance
    status from below expectation to matching expectation, namely, Sri Lanka (85th), Bangladesh (102nd),
    Ethiopia (117th) and Yemen (128th). Conversely, 12 economies fell back from matching expectation to
    come below expectation, half of them the Latin America and Caribbean economies of Uruguay (64th),
    Paraguay (91st), Ecuador (98th), El Salvador (100th), Guatemala (110th) and Honduras (113th).