About a fortnight before International Women's Day, GSMA's Mobile Gender Gap Report (2018) estimated that women in India are 23% less likely to own cellphones than men. The difference appears starker if one investigates the ways in which citizens use cellphones. 26% of male cellphone owners use mobile internet, in comparison with only 8% of female cellphone owners. According to another estimate, just 29% of internet users in India are women.
In general, barriers to accessing digital technologies can be two-fold. Provision of additional material support can help overcome hard barriers of infrastructure and affordability. More complex issues, such as digital illiteracy and lack of appropriate content may disproportionately hinder women's access. There are also concerns surrounding the threat of online violence and cyber-stalking, along with cultural disapproval of technology use. Tackling these clearly goes beyond the realm of monetary or technological solutions.
The GSMA (2018) report points to the importance of both of these barrier types in the case of India. Affordability of handset/SIM and usage is without doubt an important barrier, especially given women's low labor force participation rates. This is in addition to the issue of financial dependence on male family members. However, an even more important reason for the digital divide in access and usage seems to be reading/writing difficulties. This is a disparity that infrastructure improvements alone cannot correct. Similarly, the relatively higher insistence among female non-users that the internet is irrelevant for them, may point to the role of social norms in de-emphasizing access to technology for women. Some evidence of this can be seen in the fact that more women than men assert that their families do not approve of their cellphone ownership and internet use (though the overall proportions are low).
Unequal access and usage emerge as critical impediments to digital technologies and ICTs solving key development challenges. Multiple donor agencies and national governments also share this view. Karl Schwab of the World Economic Forum sees ICT, and especially digital technologies, as the mark of a Fourth Industrial Revolution—enabling the world to achieve higher income and better quality of life than ever before. The World Bank believes that digital technologies can contribute to socio-economic development by providing opportunities for inclusion, greater efficiency and innovation. The global development agenda, as encapsulated by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) also acknowledges the inextricable role played by ICT (Figure 1). Notably, the SDGs recognize the instrumental role of ICT in empowering women. ICT offers flexibility in terms of time and space requirement, rendering it particularly suitable to the said objective.
Figure 1: Sustainable Development Goals and ICT
The Government of India has also increased its thrust towards use of technology as a means of furthering development. This includes direct and indirect initiatives like 'Digital India', 'Smart cities', and the utilization of ICT to bring last mile banking to the rural populace. Yet unlike Swachh Bharat Abhiyan which exploits traditional values surrounding women and honor to induce behavioral changes in sanitation, Digital India seems resolutely gender-neutral.
Despite this, the program does much right. For one, it backs up the intent to provide digital infrastructure with the recognition of the need to provide universal digital literacy. It also recognizes the importance of making content available in different Indian languages. Yet, what it misses, is any mention of the specific disadvantages that women may face in benefiting from various program components.
Gender-responsive policy-making will help serve women better, where the specific needs and interest of women are incorporated is important in all sectors. At the service delivery end, The following will help increase and improve accessibility:
In addition to ensuring accessibility, policy efforts should attempt to change attitudes to women and ICT usage:
An inclusive vision of Digital India needs to go beyond mere provision of infrastructure in rural areas and cheaper handsets. Implementing the above policy steps will ensure that Digital India is more inclusive and will help achieve greater outcomes.