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Comparison charts showing which countries are the top users of various types of telecommunications equipment. From the archives: "How three people in Long Island were able to divert phone calls in Ontario remains a mystery." |
China and India: The world's two most populous countries are virtual
"teledeserts," each with fewer than five telephone lines per hundred people.
Efforts are under way, however, to change this (China added 13 million phone
lines in 1995, a 49.5 percent increase), and more telephones mean more calls.
U.S. traffic with these countries has increased by more than 50 percent
annually since 1994.
Former Soviet Union: The emergence of the republics of Azerbaijan,
Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Georgia, and Uzbekistan into the global
culture is unmistakably reflected in the growth of their telephone traffic with
the United States. The traffic on each of these routes rose by more than 50
percent from 1994 to 1995. Volume remains small, to be sure (Kyrgyzstan's 372
percent increase in 1995 represents a modest absolute increase, from 66,000 to
312,000 traffic minutes), but the further development of telecommunication
networks can only boost growth. Guyana: Telephone companies in several remote countries are realizing the benefits of acting as middlemen in the lucrative international phone-sex industry, worth $2 billion a year. Guyana is a haven for such business. In 1996 Americans spent 84 million minutes, up from 35 million minutes in 1994, calling Guyana. Much of this traffic consisted of "audiotex" service: callers heard recorded messages, many of them pornographic. American carriers collected $118 million from such customers and then paid Guyana Telephone and Telegraph $72 million for completing the calls, a portion of which was passed on to the audiotex providers. -- Jason Kowal Source: TeleGeography, Inc. (www.telegeography.com) Copyright © 1998 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; June 1998; Speaking Volumes; Volume 281, No. 6; page 83. |
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