Research Briefing June 2025

Technology Diffusion in
Emerging Economies

How innovations propagate across developing nations — the forces that accelerate adoption, the barriers that impede it, and the policies that shape outcomes for 6.8 billion people.

0% of world population in emerging & developing economies
0B new internet users gained since 2005 in developing regions
0% mobile penetration rate across Sub-Saharan Africa in 2025
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Understanding Technology Diffusion

Technology diffusion refers to the process by which innovations spread across populations, markets, and geographies over time. In emerging economies, this process is shaped by unique dynamics: leapfrogging legacy infrastructure, adapting technologies to local contexts, and navigating resource constraints that don't exist in developed markets.

Unlike the linear adoption patterns theorized by Everett Rogers in 1962, technology diffusion in emerging economies often follows non-linear, discontinuous paths — driven by mobile-first paradigms, informal economies, and policy interventions that can rapidly accelerate or impede adoption.

Understanding these dynamics is critical. By 2030, emerging economies will account for over 60% of global GDP (PPP), and the technologies they adopt — or fail to adopt — will reshape global supply chains, climate trajectories, and geopolitical power structures.

Figure 1

Rogers' S-Curve vs. observed adoption patterns in emerging markets, showing characteristic "leapfrog" acceleration phases.

The Diffusion Ecosystem

Technology diffusion in emerging economies operates across four interconnected layers. Disruption at any layer cascades through the system.

1

Infrastructure Layer

Physical and digital infrastructure — telecommunications networks, electricity grids, data centers, and transport logistics — forms the foundation upon which technology adoption occurs.

  • $1.5T annual infrastructure gap in developing nations
  • 600M+ people in Africa still lack electricity access
  • 3G/4G coverage reaching 95% of global population by 2025
2

Institutional Layer

Regulatory frameworks, intellectual property regimes, trade policies, and governance structures determine the rules under which technology enters and scales within a market.

  • Regulatory quality correlates 0.72 with tech adoption rates
  • IP protection varies 10x between best/worst emerging economies
  • Data sovereignty laws enacted in 60+ developing nations
3

Human Capital Layer

Education systems, digital literacy, technical workforce availability, and entrepreneurial culture shape a society's capacity to absorb, adapt, and innovate upon imported technologies.

  • 40% of firms in South Asia cite skill gaps as top constraint
  • STEM graduates growing 8% annually in India, Vietnam
  • Digital literacy below 35% in 20+ least-developed countries
4

Market & Demand Layer

Consumer purchasing power, market size, competitive dynamics, and demand characteristics determine commercial viability and the pace at which technologies scale beyond early adopters.

  • $30T emerging-market consumer spending projected by 2030
  • Mobile money accounts surpass bank accounts in 13 African nations
  • Bottom-of-pyramid innovation driving frugal tech design

Forces Accelerating Technology Diffusion

Several interconnected forces accelerate the spread of technology in emerging markets.

01

Mobile-First Leapfrogging

Emerging economies routinely bypass legacy infrastructure stages. Sub-Saharan Africa skipped fixed-line telephony entirely; Southeast Asia leapfrogged branch banking via mobile payments. This pattern — skipping the intermediate technology generation — compresses decades of diffusion into years.

Example: M-Pesa launched in Kenya in 2007. By 2024, mobile money processes over $1 trillion annually across Africa, serving populations that never had traditional bank accounts.
02

Demographic Dividends

Young, urbanizing populations create both supply and demand dynamics favorable to adoption. The median age in Africa is 19 (vs. 38 in the U.S. and 49 in Japan). These digital-native cohorts adopt new technologies with minimal friction and form entrepreneurial ecosystems around them.

Example: Lagos, Nairobi, and Bangalore have become global startup hubs, with venture funding into African tech startups exceeding $5B in 2022 before correcting to ~$3.5B through a global downturn cycle.
03

FDI & Technology Transfer

Foreign direct investment remains a primary channel for technology transfer, particularly in manufacturing. When multinationals establish operations in emerging economies, they bring process technologies, management practices, and supply chain standards that diffuse into local ecosystems via labor mobility and supplier relationships.

Example: Vietnam's electronics manufacturing sector grew from near-zero to $100B+ in exports over 15 years, driven by Samsung, Intel, and Foxconn investments that created dense supplier ecosystems.
04

Open-Source & Low-Cost Access

Open-source software, cloud computing, and affordable hardware have dramatically reduced the cost of technology adoption. A developer in Accra has access to the same AI models, development tools, and cloud infrastructure as one in San Francisco — at marginal cost approaching zero.

Example: India's Aadhaar biometric ID system — the world's largest — was built substantially on open-source technologies, enabling digital identity for 1.4 billion people at a cost of roughly $1 per enrollment.
05

South-South Technology Corridors

Technology increasingly flows between emerging economies rather than exclusively from developed to developing nations. China's tech ecosystem exports to Africa, Indian IT services power Middle Eastern digitization, and Brazilian agritech spreads across Latin America. These corridors often deliver more contextually appropriate solutions than North-South transfers.

Example: Chinese firms like Transsion (Tecno, Itel brands) captured over 50% of Africa's smartphone market by designing specifically for African consumers — dual-SIM, long battery life, and cameras optimized for darker skin tones.
06

Government Digital Public Infrastructure

National-scale digital public goods — identity systems, payment rails, data exchanges — create platforms upon which private innovation can scale rapidly. India's "India Stack" (Aadhaar + UPI + DigiLocker) is the most cited model, now being replicated across dozens of nations.

Example: UPI (Unified Payments Interface) processed 14+ billion transactions monthly by early 2025, making India's digital payments volume comparable to the combined card transaction volumes of many developed nations.

Structural Impediments

Despite accelerating adoption, significant structural barriers persist — creating uneven diffusion landscapes within and across emerging economies.

Figure 2

Composite severity impact scores for major barriers to technology adoption in emerging economies. Scores derived from World Bank Enterprise Surveys, ITU data, and expert assessment.

Critical

Digital Divide & Connectivity Gaps

2.6 billion people remain offline globally, overwhelmingly concentrated in emerging economies. Even where coverage exists, quality varies enormously — median mobile broadband speeds in Sub-Saharan Africa are ~15 Mbps versus 75+ Mbps in advanced economies. Urban-rural divides within countries often exceed differences between nations.

Critical

Affordability Constraints

Device and data costs relative to income remain prohibitive for billions. In low-income countries, 1GB of mobile data can cost 10–20% of average monthly income (ITU threshold: 2%). A basic smartphone at $50 represents a month's wages for the bottom 40% in many African economies.

High

Regulatory Fragmentation

Inconsistent regulations across and within regions create compliance burdens that slow technology deployment. Fintech companies expanding across Africa face 54 distinct regulatory regimes. Data localization requirements in India, Indonesia, and Nigeria impose infrastructure costs that disproportionately affect smaller firms.

High

Skill Gaps & Brain Drain

While STEM enrollment grows, quality and relevance lag. Over 60% of African graduates require significant retraining for technology roles (IFC). Compounding this, brain drain siphons top talent — Nigeria alone lost an estimated 16,000 doctors and tens of thousands of tech workers between 2016–2022.

Medium

Financing Gaps

The SME financing gap in emerging markets exceeds $5 trillion. Technology adoption requires capital investment, and firms in developing economies face borrowing costs 3–5x higher than developed-market peers. Venture capital, while growing, remains concentrated in a handful of hub cities.

Medium

Language & Localization

Over 80% of internet content is in just 10 languages. For the 3,000+ languages spoken across emerging economies, technology often arrives in forms that are linguistically and culturally inaccessible. Voice interfaces and AI translation are beginning to address this, but adoption of these solutions is itself uneven.

Diffusion Patterns by Region

Technology adoption varies dramatically by region, shaped by distinct infrastructure, institutional, and demographic contexts.

Figure 3

Internet Penetration by Region (2015 vs. 2025)

Figure 4

Technology Readiness Index — Emerging Economies (2025)

Sub-Saharan Africa

Leapfrog Frontier

Africa exemplifies leapfrog adoption: mobile money, off-grid solar, and drone delivery reached scale before many legacy alternatives. Mobile penetration hit 73% by 2025, yet internet penetration lags at ~40% — creating a "mobile-rich, internet-poor" paradox. The continent's 1.4 billion people represent the world's largest untapped technology market.

$5.6B VC funding (2022 peak)
800+ active tech hubs
~40% internet penetration

South & Southeast Asia

Scale Powerhouse

Home to half the world's population, this region combines massive consumer markets with rapidly maturing digital ecosystems. India's UPI and Indonesia's GoPay/OVO demonstrate how domestic platforms can outpace global incumbents. Vietnam and Bangladesh are emerging as manufacturing-tech corridors, while India's IT services sector remains the global backbone of digital transformation.

14B+ monthly UPI transactions (India)
73% internet penetration (SE Asia)
$100B+ Vietnam electronics exports

Latin America & Caribbean

Fintech Leader

Latin America has become a global leader in fintech adoption, driven by large unbanked populations and supportive regulatory sandboxes (notably Brazil and Mexico). Nubank became the world's largest digital bank with 100M+ customers. E-commerce penetration surged during COVID and remains sticky, while the region's agritech sector is applying precision agriculture at scale across Brazil's cerrado and Argentina's pampas.

100M+ Nubank customers
75% internet penetration
$8B+ fintech investment (2021)

Middle East & North Africa

State-Driven Modernizer

Gulf states are pursuing aggressive top-down digital transformation (Saudi Vision 2030, UAE's AI strategy), leveraging sovereign wealth to build smart cities and AI infrastructure. North Africa offers a lower-cost, multilingual tech talent pool increasingly tapped by European firms. The region's smartphone penetration exceeds 80%, but adoption depth varies sharply between Gulf monarchies and conflict-affected states.

$1.5T+ Vision 2030 investment program
80%+ smartphone penetration (Gulf)
45% youth population under 25

Diffusion in Practice

Examining specific technology trajectories reveals the mechanisms through which diffusion succeeds — or stalls.

Mobile Finance

M-Pesa & the Mobile Money Revolution

Kenya → Pan-African
2007

Safaricom launches M-Pesa in Kenya as a simple person-to-person payment service.

2012

25% of Kenya's GDP flows through M-Pesa. Ecosystem expands to savings, credit, and merchant payments.

2018

Model replicates across East Africa, West Africa, and South Asia. Regulatory frameworks mature to support interoperability.

2024

Mobile money processes $1T+ annually across Africa. GSMA reports 835M+ registered accounts in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Key Insight: M-Pesa's success was not purely technological — it required a permissive regulatory environment (Central Bank of Kenya allowed non-bank providers), an existing agent distribution network (leveraging Safaricom's airtime resellers), and a genuine market gap (85% unbanked at launch). Attempts to replicate in markets missing any of these three pillars consistently underperformed.
Digital Public Infrastructure

India Stack: Identity, Payments, Data

India → Global South
2009

Aadhaar biometric identity program initiated, targeting universal digital ID for 1.4 billion residents.

2016

UPI (Unified Payments Interface) launches, enabling instant bank-to-bank transfers via mobile. Demonetization accelerates adoption.

2021

India Stack framework recognized by G20; nations including Brazil, Thailand, and Nigeria begin adopting modular components.

2025

UPI processes 14B+ transactions monthly. India pursues cross-border UPI linkages with Singapore, UAE, and France.

Key Insight: India Stack demonstrates how government-built digital public infrastructure can create a "platform effect" — once identity and payments rails are universal, private sector innovation (fintech, healthtech, edtech) can build on top at marginal cost. The model's replicability depends on state capacity and trust in government digital systems, which varies enormously across contexts.
Energy Technology

Off-Grid Solar: Distributed Energy Leapfrogging

East Africa & South Asia
2010

Pay-as-you-go (PAYG) solar home systems emerge, combining IoT-enabled hardware with mobile money billing.

2016

Companies like M-KOPA and d.light reach millions of households. Falling solar panel costs (down 90% since 2010) make unit economics viable.

2020

Off-grid solar sector serves 490M+ people globally. Products expand from basic lighting to TVs, refrigeration, and productive-use appliances.

2025

Mini-grid and rooftop solar converge; battery storage costs drop 70% from 2020. Solar becomes cheapest electricity source in most emerging markets.

Key Insight: Off-grid solar succeeded by combining four technology diffusion enablers simultaneously: falling hardware costs (global supply chain), innovative financing (PAYG via mobile money), appropriate design (modular, low-wattage systems), and alignment with national electrification goals. It's a textbook case of technology diffusion driven by business model innovation rather than technological breakthrough alone.

AI, Blockchain, and the Next Wave

Frontier technologies present both amplified opportunities and amplified risks for emerging economies.

Artificial Intelligence

AI adoption in emerging economies is bifurcating: a handful of nations (China, India, UAE, Brazil) are building domestic AI capabilities, while most remain consumers of models built elsewhere. Key applications include agricultural yield prediction, medical diagnostics in provider-scarce regions, and fraud detection in digital financial services.

Opportunity: AI could add $15.7T to the global economy by 2030 (PwC), with China and Southeast Asia capturing a disproportionate share. Multilingual LLMs are finally addressing the language barrier.
Risk: Compute concentration in a few nations could create new dependency structures. AI-driven automation may displace the low-cost labor advantage that fueled industrial development in previous decades.

Blockchain & Digital Currencies

Emerging economies lead global crypto adoption — 12 of the top 20 countries by grassroots crypto use are developing nations (Chainalysis). Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are being piloted in Nigeria (eNaira), the Bahamas (Sand Dollar), and Jamaica (JAM-DEX), with India and Brazil in advanced testing.

Opportunity: Remittance costs (averaging 6.2% for Sub-Saharan Africa) could drop below 1% via blockchain rails. CBDCs may extend financial inclusion to the last mile.
Risk: Regulatory uncertainty, consumer protection gaps, and several high-profile collapses have slowed institutional adoption. The eNaira achieved limited traction despite Nigeria's crypto-savvy population.

Green Technology & Climate Tech

Emerging economies are both the most vulnerable to climate change and the fastest-growing markets for clean energy technology. Solar installations in India grew 30x from 2014 to 2024. Electric two-wheelers are transforming urban transport across Vietnam and India. Brazil's ethanol-flex-fuel ecosystem remains a global model for bioenergy transition.

Opportunity: Green industrialization could create 65M jobs in emerging economies by 2030 (ILO). Critical mineral deposits (lithium, cobalt, rare earths) give resource-rich developing nations leverage in clean energy supply chains.
Risk: Without technology transfer and climate finance, many nations risk being locked into fossil-fuel dependency. The "green premium" remains prohibitive for the poorest economies without concessional financing.

Shaping Equitable Diffusion

Policy choices made today will determine whether technology diffusion narrows or widens global inequality.

I

Build Digital Public Infrastructure

Governments should invest in shared digital rails — identity, payments, data exchange — as public goods rather than leaving them to proprietary platforms. India Stack demonstrates that public digital infrastructure can catalyze private innovation at scale while maintaining sovereign control.

  • Adopt modular, open-standard DPI frameworks (e.g., MOSIP for identity)
  • Ensure interoperability between mobile money, banking, and government systems
  • Invest in national data center infrastructure to reduce cloud dependency
II

Design Adaptive Regulation

Static regulatory frameworks cannot keep pace with technology cycles. Regulatory sandboxes — tested successfully in Kenya (fintech), Rwanda (drones), and Brazil (open banking) — allow controlled experimentation while managing risk. Regional regulatory harmonization can expand addressable markets.

  • Establish technology-neutral regulatory sandboxes with clear graduation criteria
  • Pursue regional regulatory harmonization (e.g., African Continental Free Trade Area digital protocols)
  • Create agile regulatory bodies with technology expertise and mandate to iterate
III

Invest in Human Capital at Scale

Technology without capability is hardware without software. Education systems must evolve from rote learning to digital fluency, critical thinking, and applied technical skills. This requires both formal education reform and alternative pathways (bootcamps, apprenticeships, online platforms).

  • Integrate computational thinking into primary education curricula
  • Scale vocational coding programs and industry-certified training pathways
  • Create incentive structures to reduce brain drain and encourage diaspora engagement
IV

Close the Financing Gap

Technology adoption requires capital. Blended finance instruments, development bank digital lending facilities, and risk-sharing mechanisms can mobilize private capital for technology diffusion. Public procurement can create anchor demand for domestic tech firms.

  • Deploy blended finance vehicles combining concessional and commercial capital
  • Use public procurement to create anchor demand for domestic technology companies
  • Develop specialized venture and growth-stage financing for technology SMEs

Diffusion at a Glance

Key metrics tracking technology adoption across the developing world.

Global Mobile Subscriptions

8.6B
Exceeding world population due to multi-SIM usage
+2.3% YoY

Emerging Market Internet Users

4.2B
Up from 800M in 2010
+5.8% YoY

VC into EM Tech Startups (2024)

$42B
Recovering from 2023 global correction
+18% YoY

Digital Payments Penetration

57%
Of adults in developing economies used digital payments (2024)
+12pts since 2021

Renewable Energy Capacity Added

180GW
Added by emerging economies in 2024
+22% YoY

AI Readiness Gap

3.4×
Difference in AI readiness between top and bottom quartile nations
Widening

The Stakes Are Global

Technology diffusion in emerging economies is not a niche development topic — it is the central economic and geopolitical question of the coming decades. Whether 6.8 billion people gain meaningful access to AI, clean energy, digital finance, and precision agriculture will determine global trajectories on climate, inequality, migration, and stability.

The evidence shows that diffusion is neither automatic nor inevitable. It requires intentional investment in infrastructure, human capital, and institutional capacity. It demands regulatory frameworks that balance innovation with protection. And it benefits from international cooperation that avoids new forms of technological dependency.

The nations and institutions that understand these dynamics — and act on them — will shape the 21st century. The window for action is open, but it is not unlimited.