WSIS, IDI and Implications for Regional Cooperation

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WSIS, IDI and Implications for Regional Cooperation Sang-yirl Nam, KISDI July 20-22, 2009 EGM, UNESCAP 1

CONTENT I. ICTs and general consensus II. The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) III. Recent development in global ICT sector IV. Efforts to measure progress toward information society: IDI IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 IV-2. Cost of ICT services V. Global cooperation and governments role VI. Implications and recommendations 2

I. ICTs and general consensus - ICTs are one of the most powerful engines of growth - ICTs will continue to spread and serve as critical development enablers - to address digital divide by enhancing universal access and utilization of ICT is a current global issue 3

II. The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) - world leaders recognize the importance of ICTs as valuable assets for economic growth - and express strong political commitment towards building an inclusive, people-centered and developmentoriented information society - held in two phase, in Geneva 2003 and Tunis 2005 - an important landmark in global effort to eradicate poverty and achieve the UN MDGs by 2015 4

II. The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) * The MDGs, adopted by all the UN member states in 2000, have become a universal framework for development and a means for developing countries and their development partners to work together in pursuit of a shared future for all. They represent commitments for resolving the eight issues by 2015. (MDG 8) Develop a global partnership for development: In cooperation with the private sector, make available the benefits of new technologies- especially ICTs. 5

II. The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) - set out a vision to harness the potential of ICTs to achieve the development aspirations of the world * more specifically, to ensure access and utilization of ICTs including content * related action lines include role of public authorities and stakeholders infrastructure access to information and knowledge capacity building building confidence and security enabling environment applications (e-something) cultural diversity media ethical dimension international and regional cooperation 6

II. The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) - emphasize the need to develop an ICT index for a realistic international performance evaluation and benchmarking through comparable statistical indicators and a composite index (Geneva Plan of Action) - call for periodic evaluation through indicators and benchmarking, and an assessment of the magnitude of the digital divide (Tunis Agenda) 7

III. Recent development in global ICT sector - ICTs continue to spread through the world - more and more people have access to the Internet, including via mobile cellular networks, and its wealth of information and applications - by the end of 2008, the world had reached over 4 billion mobile cellular subscriptions, 1.3 billion fixed telephone lines, and close to a quarter of the world s population using the Internet. - over the past few years, strong and uninterrupted growth in most ICT services, and high demand for ICTs from large developing countries 8

III. Recent development in global ICT sector - mobile phones have revolutionized telecommunication in the developing countries: an average 49.5% penetration rate at the end of 2008 from close to zero only ten years ago - the number of Internet users has grown at a much slower rate, especially in developing countries; 13 internet users per 100 inhabitants at the end of 2007 - fixed Internet access in developing countries is still limited, often slow and/or expensive - (high-speed) broadband connections are rare and mobile broadband is still insignificant in most developing countries 9

IV. Efforts to measure progress toward information society: IDI * ITU (2009), Measuring the Information Society- the ICT Development Index (IDI) - need to develop a single index to track the digital divide and to measure countries progress towards information societies - guided by earlier ITU composite indices: the Digital Access Index (DAI developed in 2003) the Digital Opportunity Index (DOI in 2005) the ICT Opportunity Index (ICT-OI in 2005) 10

IV. Efforts to measure progress toward information society: IDI - ICT Development Index (IDI): to capture the level of advancement of ICTs in over 150 countries, compare progress made between 2002 and 2007 - based on three stages ICT readiness- network infrastructure and access to ICT ICT intensity- use of ICTs in the society ICT impact- efficient and effective ICT use (skills) 11

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 - five years is a relatively long period in terms of information society developments, ICTs are very dynamic by nature Overall index - all top ten countries of IDI in 2007 are from Europe, Korea is the only exception. They have primarily gained on the sub-index ICT use with having already fairly good ICT access and top ICT skills in 2002. countries with low ICT levels are primarily from the developing world, especially LLDCs. 12

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 - over the five-year period, relative change in IDI was similar between developed (36%) and developing countries (38 % increase on average) - close relationship between ICT level and income (GDP): ICI levels are highly correlated with GNI (or GDP) per capita, a correlation coefficient of 0.91 in 2007. * Among those that have higher than expected ICT levels are several of the top ranking IDI countries: Sweden, the Netherlands, Denmark, Iceland, and Korea. In particular, Korea has much higher-than-expected ICT levels relative to its income level in PPP terms. This illustrates how a strong and targeted government policy towards ICT development can drive the development of the information society with relatively low income levels. 13

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 For sub-indices - huge improvements in the access and use of ICTs worldwide but large disparities remain among countries - for example, fast growth of mobile telephony in many countries but the digital divide is slightly closing between countries with very high and low ICT levels 14

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 (ICT access): while developed countries score much higher on ICT access, developing countries have made large relative improvements (59.4% change relative to 31.5% change for DC s). This suggests that developing countries are slowly catching up on ICT access. 15

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 (ICT use): Relative gains were highest on the use sub-index for both developed and developing country groups, largely due to low initial value in 2002. Developing countries still have very low values on ICT use. Developed countries gained highest value on the ICT use sub-index, whereas developing countries made most IDI gains on the access sub-index. 16

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 (ICT skills): reflecting the nature of the underlying indicators (adult literacy and school enrollment) related to countries policy agendas for decades. Developing countries have made slightly higher improvements during the five-year period than developed countries, starting from lower levels in 2002. 17

IV-1. Global and Korea s ICT development between 2002 and 2007 - Korea comes second in the IDI 2007, up two places from 2002. Korea has gained 1.43 points in the index value and has the highest ICT use sub-index value (5.85) of all countries. Korea has increased its broadband penetration significantly during the past few years and come second globally, after Japan, in mobile broadband penetration. 18

IV-2. Cost of ICT services - high tariffs are practically a major barrier to ICT diffusion and use - the new ICT price basket of ITU combines fixed telephone, mobile cellular and fixed broadband tariffs into one measure, absolute value (PPP) and relative to country s national income (GNI) - provide a measurement tool for assessing ICT affordability globally 19

IV-2. Cost of ICT services - on average, the 2008 ICT Price Basket value corresponds to 15% of countries average GNI per capita with variations from 1.6% in developed countries to 20% in developing countries. Countries with higher income levels pay relatively little for ICT services, while low-income countries pay relatively more. In addition, the high value of the ICT Price Basket in several developing countries is partly explained by very high fixed Internet broadband prices. In general, countries with high prices have lower access and usage level. 20

IV-2. Cost of ICT services - fixed telephone tariffs are relatively cheap in most countries, but fixed broadband tariffs are often prohibitive and a major impediment for countries embracing ICTs - fixed and mobile telephony is becoming more and more affordable worldwide - fixed broadband Internet is still unaffordable for the majority of people, which is one of the main policy challenges to be addressed 21

V. Global cooperation and governments role - ICTs as general purpose technologies or social infrastructure, guiding role of government policy is crucial - global cooperation to share development experiences and to address global divide * ICT policy consultation program by Korea (2003-2009) -2003 Myanmar: National Informatization and e-government Strategy Congo, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco: e-government Project - 2004 Vietnam: e-government Project of Hanoi City Government Indonesia: Policy and Strategy for Achieving Telecommunication Reforms 22

V. Global cooperation and governments role - 2005 Cambodia: EDIS/EDMS Strategy Laos: e-procurement - 2006 The Philippines: Construction of National Computer Emergency Response Team Indonesia: Grand Design of Cyber Law - 2007 Myanmar: Consultation on e-government Cambodia: Consultation on Competition Policy and Radio Law Uzbekistan: Consultation on Cyber Security Indonesia: Telecommunications Policy (*) Vietnam: National Informatization Policy (*) 23

V. Global cooperation and governments role - 2008 Lao DPR: Consultation on Interconnection Policy Kazakhstan: Consultation on Spectrum Management Policy South Africa: Competition Assessment of Mobile Telecommunications Markets Cambodia: Telecommunications Infrastructure Construction Policy (*) Ethiopia: Informatization and e-government (*) - 2009 Vietnam: Consultation on Information Protection Policy Peru: Policies for Introducing Digital Convergence Services Tunis: TBD The Philippines: Digital Contents, IPR & NGN (*) Colombia: Digital Contents, Information Protection Technology (*) (*) Dispatch of Experts and on-site consultation 24

VI. Implications and recommendations - enhance awareness: ICTs are general purpose technologies and digital divide is a global issue - build human capacity to better utilize ICTs along with physical infrastructure - recognize guiding role of government policy and publicprivate partnership (business-friendly environment) - identify and prioritize regional needs for and affordability of cooperation 25

VI. Implications and recommendations - more balanced interests between global targets and region specific needs, e.g. address digital divide vs. disaster risk reduction - utilize current global economic crisis as an opportunity for structural reform: e.g., Korea accelerated its investment in ICT sector after experiencing the first and the second oil shock. 26

Thank you for your attention! Sang-yirl Nam Director, International Cooperation Division KISDI synam@kisdi.re.kr 27