Latvia is celebrating today with the news it has the world’s second fastest broadband service, now beaten only by South Korea.
According to Ookla, which released speed measurement test results this week, the Baltic state in northeastern Europe achieved second place with a speed index of 24.41 Mbps, ahead of Moldova (21.63 Mbps), Japan (20.43 Mbps) and Sweden (19.95 Mbps).
Latvia has come a long way from its former days as a Soviet Socialist Republic. The country declared its independence March 3, 1991 and adopted a parliamentary democracy. Latvia maintains close economic ties with the United States and Scandinavian countries, and has rapidly sought its future within the European Community, distancing itself from Russia. Today Latvia is a member of both the European Union and NATO.
Like other Baltic republics Lithuania and Estonia, Latvia has undergone a complete telecommunications transformation. Out went the old Soviet-era telephone exchanges with antiquated copper wire, and in came optical fiber, especially in the nine major cities within Latvia’s administrative divisions. Latvia’s economic planning heartily endorsed broadband service as a major economic driver, and the country and its citizens depend heavily on its broadband networks for entertainment, banking, business, education, and facilitating health care.
As a result, broadband is plentiful, fast, and remarkably inexpensive, especially in cities. In rural communities, parts of Latvia still rely on older DSL technology delivered over traditional phone lines, but the country has plans for universal optical fiber as finances allow. Meanwhile, widespread wireless mobile networks provide Europe’s least expensive cell service, with a charge averaging just four cents per minute to make and receive calls.
Latvia’s dominant broadband provider is Lattelecom, co-owned by the Latvian government and Sweden’s TeliaSonera AB. Its broadband packages stun the rest of Europe and North America.
For customers in Riga, Jurmala, Jelgava, Daugavpils, Valmiera, and Ventspils districts, fiber optic broadband delivers service up to 200 Mbps upstream/downstream for just under $26.02 per month. At that price, they also include a guarantee that speeds will always be above 30/20 Mbps.
Lattelecom is also introducing a 500Mbps service shortly. There are additional substantial discounts for expectant mothers, educators, and the disabled. For those too distant to access the fiber network, a DSL package up to 10Mbps with unlimited telephone calling (including international long distance) costs $37.45 per month.
The Baltic press has run with the success story of the region’s broadband providers, especially in light of the continued decline in scores for broadband in the United States, which has now fallen to 26th place (10.15 Mbps), and the United Kingdom, 33rd (7.71 Mbps). Canada came in at 32nd (7.92 Mbps).
The most dramatic improvements in broadband continue in eastern Europe, particularly in the Republic of Moldova, its next door neighbor Romania and Bulgaria. South Korea maintains its world-leader status.
Among the worst performers: Haiti, Lebanon, El Salvador, Afghanistan, Guatemala, Zimbabwe, Yemen, Mali, and Sudan.
How are speeds outside of Latvia though? If you’re effectively buying a capped port on a LAN that spans Lattelecom’s customer base things are much less spectacular, though 30 Mbps symmetric for $26.02 still is not bad at all.
Also, how good is Lattelecom at keeping internet service up? I’ve heard that in some countries “ethernet cooperatives” are using consumer-level gear which buckles under high-bandwidth load…
” Latvia’s economic planning heartily endorsed broadband service as a major economic driver, and the country and its citizens depend heavily on its broadband networks for entertainment, banking, business, education, and facilitating health care.”
Clearly doesn’t work though!!!! And there is a reason its so cheap the average monthly wage is
$839. I think its about 3k in the USA
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-03-02/latvia-average-wage-fell-12-1-in-quarter-on-austerity-program.html
Oh also the unemployment rate in Latvia is 19% I bet they are all lining up to use the cheap Broadband, does Lattlecom give them any discount on their service?
WOW. LATVIA IS THE BEST!!! I cannot believe that the richest country in the world does not have that kind of broadband. SHAME USA.
Let’s do some math… According to the story Loons in June posted, Latvian income is $839.10 per month. Broken down into monthly income, the US per-capita income is, on average, about $3319. Not sure how much the above figures come out to when it comes to discretionary spending (which, believe it or not, internet access falls under) however if you do a direct ratio you’ve got 3.96:1 in favor of the US. So let’s multiply all the Latvian prices by 3.96. Again, rough math but we’re trying to see what that percentage of monthly income would be in the US.… Read more »
More info: Check out the second-fastest ISP in Latvia: http://pronets.lv/internets,38.html Google Translate (yay Chrome!) shows that the ISP sells access at 100 Mbps within its own network and slower access (topping out at 100/50) outside. Network access outside Latvia (population 2.25 million) is advertised to be about 1/5 that speed. So the “startup” package is actually 7/1 if you need to leave Latvia. How about the fastest ISP of them all? http://balticom.lv/lv/internet_dom/home/tarifi_dom?district=61 100 Mbps at home, 10-20 Mbps abroad. Cheap in absolute dollars? Yes. Cheap in relative dollars? Not so much. Also, the company has a speedtest.net server on-network so… Read more »
Thanks Ian for the time spent in your research. It’s very easy to post stuff that is sensational, as you said you need to take a step back and look at the big picture.
I personally pay enough taxes without having the government “sponsoring” other peoples entertainment.
And the best part is that Lattelecom’s optical internet simply works. I have had it now for about a year, and it is constantly at its max. I have the 100Mbit/s option, and I download and send files from LV at ~11MB/s. And from the outside it is usually around 4MB/s. I wonder how fast it is for those that have the 500Mbit/s option.
For instance, software download from Apple and MSFT servers comes at a decent 9.5MB/s – awesome!
I am proud to live in Latvia 🙂