A Widening Divide: Select Committee Report Criticizes UK Government’s Digital Strategy

The UK government's approach to bridging the digital divide has come under severe scrutiny in a report by the House of Lords committee. The report highlights the absence of a credible strategy for digital inclusion, leaving millions without necessary online access. The committee calls for a new inclusion strategy, encompassing policy changes and increased digital literacy education. The report emphasizes that without substantial action, the UK's ambition to become a technological superpower is threatened, undermining the nation's productivity, economic growth, and social inclusion.
A Widening Divide: Select Committee Report Criticizes UK Government's Digital Strategy

A House of Lords committee has criticized the UK government for its failure to tackle the deepening digital divide in the country. Despite the grand ambitions of the UK to become a technology superpower, the government appears to be leaving behind millions of citizens who lack the means, money, or skills to access online resources, according to a report by the Lords Communications and digital committee.


Key statistics highlighted in the report paint a dire picture. Currently, 1.7 million UK households lack broadband or mobile internet access. Furthermore, due to the cost of living crisis, up to 1 million people have severed their broadband access, and 2.4 million individuals can’t perform simple tasks required to go online, like opening a browser or connecting to a Wi-Fi network.

The report further elaborates that this digital divide is threatening UK productivity, economic growth, and socio-economic inclusion. The rapid shift to online platforms is creating a chasm between those who can access services like healthcare, housing, banking, and benefits and those who cannot.

Certain groups are particularly at risk of digital exclusion. These include the elderly, with over half of adults lacking basic digital skills aged over 75, children from low-income families, and individuals with physical or mental disabilities. The divide is also geographical, with London boasting the lowest proportion of non-internet users at 7%, compared to 14% in Northern Ireland and 12% in north-east England.

The report has also drawn attention to the digital skills deficit among UK workers. Research estimates suggest that by 2030, five million workers will be “acutely underskilled” in using basic digital tools such as Microsoft Teams. These figures, among others, indicate that the government’s current efforts to mitigate the digital divide are insufficient.

The committee’s Chair, Tina Stowell, emphasized that the government’s lofty technological ambitions cannot be realized when millions of UK citizens are under-skilled or completely excluded from the digital world.

Back in 2014, the government published a digital inclusion strategy with the objective that by 2020, “everyone who can be digitally capable will be.” However, the Lords report reveals that government groups focused on digital inclusion have been disbanded, leading to skepticism about the government’s interest in driving change.

In light of these findings, the Lord’s committee is calling for a new digital inclusion strategy that is overseen by cross-government. The proposed strategy includes five key policies: reducing VAT on social tariffs offered by internet providers, teaching people basic digital skills in schools, businesses, and community organizations, creating “digital inclusion hubs” in libraries, encouraging the development of alternative broadband networks, and ensuring AI-driven decision-making in public services doesn’t marginalize digitally excluded groups.

In response to the report, a government spokesperson stated their commitment to ensuring that no one is left behind in the digital age, pointing to measures such as social broadband and mobile tariffs and the ยฃ5bn Project Gigabit.

The release of the report coincides with UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s ambition for the UK to become a center for AI governance. However, the Lords committee contends that without a “credible plan to tackle digital inclusion,” the potential of the country’s digital future is compromised.


Recent Content

Low-code platforms like VC4’s Service2Create (S2C) are transforming telecom operations by accelerating service delivery, reducing manual tasks, and simplifying integration with legacy systems. Discover how this technology drives digital transformation, improves efficiency, and future-proofs telecom networks.
Nokia, Digita, and CoreGo have partnered to roll out private 5G networks and edge computing solutions at high-traffic event venues. Using Nokia’s Digital Automation Cloud (DAC) and CoreGoโ€™s payment and access tech, the trio delivers real-time data flow, reliable connectivity, and enhanced guest experience across Finland and international locationsโ€”serving over 2 million attendees to date.
AI Pulse: Telecomโ€™s Next Frontier is a definitive guide to how AI is reshaping the telecom landscape โ€” strategically, structurally, and commercially. Spanning over 130 pages, this MWC 2025 special edition explores AIโ€™s growing maturity in telecom, offering a comprehensive look at the technologies and trends driving transformation.

Explore strategic AI pillarsโ€”from AI Ops and Edge AI to LLMs, AI-as-a-Service, and governanceโ€”and learn how telcos are building AI-native architectures and monetization models. Discover insights from 30+ global CxOs, unpacking shifts in leadership thinking around purpose, innovation, and competitive advantage.

The edition also examines connected industries at the intersection of Private 5G, AI, and Satelliteโ€”fueling transformation in smart manufacturing, mobility, fintech, ports, sports, and more. From fan engagement to digital finance, from smart cities to the industrial metaverse, this is the roadmap to telecomโ€™s next eraโ€”where intelligence is the new infrastructure, and telcos become the enablers of everything connected.
In The Gateway to a New Future, top global telecom leadersโ€”Marc Murtra (Telefรณnica), Vicki Brady (Telstra), Sunil Bharti Mittal (Airtel), Biao He (China Mobile), and Benedicte Schilbred Fasmer (Telenor)โ€”share bold visions for reshaping the industry. From digital sovereignty and regulatory reform in Europe, to AI-powered smart cities in China and fintech platforms in Africa, these executives reveal how telecom is evolving into a driving force of global innovation, inclusion, and collaboration. The telco of tomorrow is not just a networkโ€”itโ€™s a platform for economic and societal transformation.
In Beyond Connectivity: The Telco to Techco Transformation, leaders from e&, KDDI, and MTN reveal how telecoms are evolving into technology-first, platform-driven companies. These digital pioneers are integrating AI, 5G, cloud, smart infrastructure, and fintech to unlock massive valueโ€”from AI-powered smart cities in Japan, to inclusive fintech platforms in Africa, and cloud-first enterprise solutions in the Middle East. This piece explores how telcos are reshaping their role in the digital economyโ€”building intelligent, scalable, and people-first tech ecosystems.
In Balancing Innovation and Regulation: Global Perspectives on Telecom Policy, top leaders including Jyotiraditya Scindia (India), Henna Virkkunen (European Commission), and Brendan Carr (U.S. FCC) explore how governments are aligning policy with innovation to future-proof their digital infrastructure. From Indiaโ€™s record-breaking 5G rollout and 6G ambitions, to Europeโ€™s push for AI sovereignty and U.S. leadership in open-market connectivity, this piece outlines how nations can foster growth, security, and inclusion in a hyperconnected world.

Download Magazine

With Subscription
Whitepaper
Telecom networks are facing unprecedented complexity with 5G, IoT, and cloud services. Traditional service assurance methods are becoming obsolete, making AI-driven, real-time analytics essential for competitive advantage. This independent industry whitepaper explores how DPUs, GPUs, and Generative AI (GenAI) are enabling predictive automation, reducing operational costs, and improving service quality....
Whitepaper
Explore the collaboration between Purdue Research Foundation, Purdue University, Ericsson, and Saab at the Aviation Innovation Hub. Discover how private 5G networks, real-time analytics, and sustainable innovations are shaping the "Airport of the Future" for a smarter, safer, and greener aviation industry....
Article & Insights
This article explores the deployment of 5G NR Transparent Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTNs), detailing the architecture's advantages and challenges. It highlights how this "bent-pipe" NTN approach integrates ground-based gNodeB components with NGSO satellite constellations to expand global connectivity. Key challenges like moving beam management, interference mitigation, and latency are discussed, underscoring...

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Scroll to Top