Data from ITU showed that even as global markets may be heading towards saturation with the lowest-ever global growth rate of 2.6 per cent, Asia Pacific and Africa have witnessed the strongest rise in userbase.
"Mobile-cellular subscriptions will reach almost seven billion by end 2014 and 3.6 billion of these will be in the Asia-Pacific region. The increase is mostly due to growth in the developing world where mobile-cellular subscriptions will account for 78 per cent of the world's total," it said.
By the end of 2014, ITU estimates there will be almost three billion Internet users with two-thirds of them coming from the developing world.
"The newly released ICT figures confirm once again that information and communication technologies continue to be the key drivers of the information society," ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun I Toure said.
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The report showed that fixed-telephone penetration has been declining for the past five years. By 2014-end, there will be about 100 million fewer fixed-telephone subscriptions than in 2009.
"Of all fixed-broadband subscriptions, 44 per cent are in APAC and 25 per cent are in Europe. In contrast, Africa accounts for less than 0.5 per cent and despite double-digit growth over the last four years, penetration in Africa remains very low," it said.
Africa, the Arab States, and CIS are the only regions with double-digit fixed-broadband penetration growth rates, it added.
By end 2014, 44 per cent of the world's households will have Internet access.