Phone Sharing and Cash Transfers in Togo: Quantitative Evidence from Mobile Phone Data
Emily L. Aiken, Viraj Thakur, Joshua E. Blumenstock

TL;DR
This study quantitatively examines phone sharing in Togo, revealing its prevalence, demographic patterns, and how mobile money cash transfers during COVID-19 increased sharing, with implications for aid delivery.
Contribution
Provides the first comprehensive quantitative analysis of phone sharing in Togo and assesses the impact of mobile money cash transfers on sharing behaviors.
Findings
22% of SIMs are shared in Togo
Cash transfers via mobile money increase sharing among beneficiaries
Sharing is most common among women, youth, and rural residents
Abstract
Phone sharing is pervasive in many low- and middle-income countries, affecting how millions of people interact with technology and each other. Yet there is very little quantitative evidence available on the extent or nature of phone sharing in resource-constrained contexts. This paper provides a comprehensive quantitative analysis of phone sharing in Togo, and documents how a large cash transfer program during the COVID-19 pandemic impacted sharing patterns. We analyze mobile phone records from the entire Togolese mobile network to measure the movement of SIM cards between SIM card slots (often on different mobile devices). First, we document the prevalence of sharing in Togo, with 22% of SIMs and 7% of SIM slots shared. Second, using administrative data from a government-run cash transfer program, we find that phone sharing is most common among women, young people, and people in rural…
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Taxonomy
TopicsICT Impact and Policies · ICT in Developing Communities
