The Digital Divide is still with us according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The Digital Divide is still with us according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Over nine million Britons have never accessed the internet and are still not registered online despite government action to promote the benefits, especially in helping elderly people to access cheaper services.
Although more than 38 million British adults are now registered online and over 30 million of us log on every day, people on low incomes, those with no formal educational qualifications, the elderly, and the widowed remain outside the web. Last December, 2009, Age UK appointed six pensioners to act as ‘Internet champions’ to drive the benefits of the internet home to the elderly population. Michelle Mitchell of Age UK explained: ‘It is essential that government, business and the third sector work together to provide older people with bespoke training and support to help them get online, otherwise the Digital Divide will deepen’.
The poor are especially excluded. A third of Britons who earn less that £10,399 a year are not online, compared to just 2 per cent of those earning more than £41,600. Moreover, only 45 per cent of adults without any formal qualifications had used the internet compared with 97 per cent of those with a degree. As the Open University embraces online delivery it is important that it engages with the digital divide because until these trends change, it can not truly be said to be open.