The Real Cost of the Offline Population
Connectivity now determines who can access digital education, jobs, finance, telehealth, and public services. The offline minority is still large enough to create major inequality in opportunity and resilience.
Access Is Rising, but Quality Is the Next Divide
The broad direction is upward access, but quality and affordability gaps remain. The key trajectory question is whether new users are getting meaningful broadband-level access or only intermittent, low-quality connectivity.
People online: 680 per 1,000
Raw count: about 5.51 billion people. Permille: 680 per 1,000. Category membership: Counts people with internet use access in the source timeframe, not necessarily high-speed or always-on service. Significance: This is the digitally connected majority, but quality differences inside this group still affect productivity and inclusion.
People offline: 320 per 1,000
Raw count: about 2.59 billion people. Permille: 320 per 1,000. Category membership: Includes people without effective internet use, including those priced out or without reliable network coverage. Significance: This group is where exclusion risk is highest for education, digital identity, e-commerce, and emergency information.