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Social Science Computer Review
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The Role of Income Inequality in a Multivariate Cross-National Analysis of the Digital Divide

Christian Fuchs

University of Salzburg, Austria, christian.fuchs{at}sbg.ac.at

This article is subject to the following research question: Is the role of income inequality in comparison to other factors an element that influences the digital divide? Eleven variables providing data on 126 countries are analyzed using multivariate regression to identify which of them influence Internet usage to what extent. The used data on 126 countries refer to the year 2005. The results show that income inequality measured by the Gini coefficient is an important influencing factor besides per capita income, the degree of urbanization, and the level of democratization. The results question reductionistic digital divide approaches that analyze information inequality via focusing on a single variable (such as technology or markets). Access to ICTs is shaped by the interaction of socioeconomic, political, cultural, social, and technological factors. These results cast doubt on technological determinism, economic reductionism, and linear trend projection in the digital divide debate. Digital divide causes are complex.

Key Words: digital divide • social inequality • multivariate regression analysis • social theory • international comparative assessment • global data • mathematical modeling • social policy

This version was published on February 1, 2009

Social Science Computer Review, Vol. 27, No. 1, 41-58 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0894439308321628


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