Millions left behind as digital inclusion funding fails to reach those who need it most
- Satellite Evolution Group

- 2 days ago
- 3 min read

Millions across Asia, Africa, Latin America and Oceania remain locked out of meaningful digital
participation and from the digital services that increasingly shape everyday life, despite two
decades of investment. A new study from the University of Surrey warns the real barrier is the
failure of major actors to work together.
The study, published in the Management and Organization Review, draws on evidence from 122
studies across the Global South which show that access to mobile networks, affordable internet
and digital skills is improving yet whole communities are still excluded from education, finance and
basic services because governments, businesses and international organisations continue to act in
isolation.
The research team found that the biggest obstacle is fragmentation of effort, with policies,
technologies and training programmes happening in parallel but rarely in partnership. This leaves
gaps in infrastructure, affordability and institutional capacity that stop digital services reaching
marginalised groups, from rural communities to indigenous populations.
Fred Ofori, lead author of the study and Postgraduate Researcher, Centre for Social Innovation
Management (CSIM) at the University of Surrey said: "Across the Global South we found powerful
initiatives that rarely coordinate with one another. The result is millions of people left outside the
basic digital services and opportunities most of us take for granted. Until governments, companies
and international organisations work together, inequality will simply continue to reproduce itself."
The review identifies five major stakeholder groups shaping digital inclusion across the Global
South including government bodies, private sector companies, civil society organisations,
international organisations and end users. Each group takes important action, but the impact of
these actions depends almost entirely on whether they are coordinated.
Examples include Pakistan where universities and government departments face similar
connectivity challenges yet operate without shared strategy. In Indonesia, rural digital services
reach villages but remain disconnected from wider development. In Malaysia, tailored community
programmes improve indigenous connectivity, but benefits remain limited to specific regions
rather than reaching nationwide systems.
Professor Stelvia Matos, co-author of the study and Professor of Sustainable Innovation, Centre for
Social Innovation Management (CSIM) at the University of Surrey said: "We often focus on what
technologies to introduce, but not on how those technologies will actually reach people. Unless
investment is matched with institutional coordination and cultural understanding, digital
programmes remain well intended ideas rather than real solutions that change everyday lives."
Dr Mahdi Tavalaei, co-author of the study and Senior Lecturer in Strategy and Digital
Transformation at the University of Surrey, said: “Governments and development agencies must go
beyond infrastructure and skills programmes and instead create clear roles for what they call
ecosystem coordination stakeholders who can link national policies with local action and ensure
digital investment leads to real participation.”
The study also highlights that meaningful inclusion requires approaches that are culturally relevant
and sensitive to gender inequalities, indigenous knowledge and language barriers. Successful
examples emerged where local communities were involved in designing solutions particularly in
Malaysia, China, and Ghana, where interventions improved social connectedness, rural uptake,
financial access and women’s participation.
Fred Ofori continued: "What we are really saying is that digital inclusion will only work when
national plans and local realities match up. It is not enough to build networks or design apps if
they never reach the people they are meant for. When governments, businesses and communities
pull in the same direction, digital services stop being abstract programmes and start becoming
something people can genuinely use in their daily lives."


