African Women Have Less Access to the Internet Than Men – Solutions the G20 Can Champion

African Women Have Less Access to the Internet Than Men – Solutions the G20 Can Champion


Across Africa, women have less access to the internet than men. In Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda and Tanzania only 15%-28% of women own smartphones. Tinuade Adekunbi Ojo is a feminist political economist and director of the Centre for the Study of Race, Gender and Class at the University of Johannesburg. She researches gender inequality in digital resources, and sets out what the G20 group of the world’s most powerful nations should do to close the gendered digital divide.

What is the gendered digital divide?

It refers to the systemic inequalities between women and men in accessing, using and benefiting from digital technologies. This includes mobile phones, the internet and artificial intelligence. Women experience structural barriers like education, cultural norms, less ability to pay for digital tools, and limited digital literacy.

Read more: The digital economy is becoming ordinary. Best we understand it


Follow us on WhatsApp | LinkedIn for the latest headlines

But the gendered digital divide is not just about a lack of devices or internet connectivity. It is also about men and women having unequal opportunities to participate in and shape the digital economy. Today, almost all aspects of the economy are digital, from how machines do work, to how goods are sold, to payments, to how artificial intelligence is being used in business.

How does it affect women in Africa?

I was part of a team who reviewed the negative effects of the gendered digital divide in Africa. We wrote a policy brief recommending solutions.

In Africa, the gendered digital divide makes existing gender inequalities worse. It prevents many women from getting full access to education, financial services, health information, and opportunities to start or grow businesses.

These are the problems:

  • In sub-Saharan Africa, 76% of men have access to mobile internet compared to 63% of women. Around 205 million women in the region do not yet have smartphones or access to the internet on phones.
  • In Africa, only 23% of rural people have access to the internet. Women in rural and marginalised communities face the highest barriers to affordable internet connections. This means they are cut off from digital skills training and online education. This undermines their ability to compete in the labour market, access public services, and fully participate in governance and innovation.

Read more: Digital democracy is still a long way off in Africa: it takes more than technology

  • Women and girls may not get the opportunity to develop skills in using digital technology, because of social and cultural practices that discourage them. There aren’t enough gender-sensitive training programmes to help women overcome this.
  • There is also a gendered digital divide in innovation, especially in artificial intelligence. This field is male dominated and so the tools it produces disadvantage women. An example is hiring algorithms that are biased towards men, meaning women are less likely to get the job.

Read more: Sudanese women are using social media to trade — and break gender barriers

What needs to happen to close this gap?

Closing the gendered digital divide requires targeted investment in affordable digital infrastructure. The government, private sector actors, development practitioners and civil society should work together on expanding and subsidising broadband internet, especially in rural and working class or underserved communities.

Read more: How Nigerian women are using WhatsApp to chat, learn and earn

Also needed are:

  • public-private partnerships that promote women’s access to affordable digital tools and internet services
  • digital skills training for women and girls in the classroom and in informal education
  • national campaigns to promote women’s participation in technology, science and maths fields

Read more: What is doxing, and how can you protect yourself?

  • mentorship and capacity-building programmes led by women in tech
  • more women in digital policy-making, research and innovation
  • gender-sensitive digital safety frameworks to keep women and girls safe online.