COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT Better Policies for Better Lives

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COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT Better Policies for Better Lives November 2013 Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides Piotr Stryszowski and Taylor Reynolds, OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Industry, and Dorothee Georg, PCD Unit, Office of the Secretary-General. Abstract The world is experiencing monumental changes in information and communications technologies (ICTs). Mobile communications networks are creating a new platform for the exchange of information and knowledge in both developed and developing countries. If leveraged across the economy and throughout sectors, ICTs, including Internet, wireless networks, mobile phones, and other communication media, can catalyse development and economic and social change, improve wellbeing and expand economic prosperity. In other words, promoting extensive and intensive use of ICTs is a high-powered multiplier and accelerator of development. This Coherence for Development (CODE) report highlights these linkages and looks at the interconnected policy coherence issues for both developed and developing countries and for international co-operation. Unless otherwise cited, it is based upon the joint work of OECD, UNESCO and ISOC, as published in The Relationship between Local Content, Internet Development and Access Prices (OECD et al., 2013). Contents Abstract What is at stake? What has been done and what is to do? Where do we go from here? References What is policy coherence for development? Policy coherence for development (PCD) is a process to integrate the multiple dimensions of development at all stages of policy making. It is based on a holistic perspective, collective action, shared responsibility and mutual benefits. Its main objectives are to: Exploit the potential of positive synergies across policies to support development, pursuing win-win situations and mutual benefits. Increase governments capacities to balance divergent policy objectives and help them to reconcile domestic policy objectives with broader international or global objectives. Avoid or minimise the negative side-effects and impacts of policies on development. Source: OECD, 2013a.

Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT What is at stake? Overview of policy coherence challenges and development impacts While improving rapidly, penetration rates and broadband prices remain highly unequal around the world, with developing countries still with significantly less penetration and higher broadband prices both internally and for external exchange of data. It is clear that the volume and the quality of ICT use are closely linked to the pricing factors with higher ICT volume and lower prices, local user generated content ( local content ) grows quickly, signalling growth in economic and social transactions that are key to value creation, cultural exchange, and social development. But wider issues and actions are also concerned when fostering ICTs, e.g. regulation and competition, infrastructure, education, finance and the design of public services. ICT for development and development for ICT The world is undergoing monumental changes with regard to communication, technology and access to information. Telecommunication methods, such as mobile phones or the internet, create a new platform of communication and exchange and offer the potential of enhancing economic and social development. People using communication infrastructures are globally connected and can tap into new sources of income and employment, knowledge and industries. Access to mobile networks is now available to 90% of the population, with the number of subscriptions around the world exceeding 5 billion, and developing countries accounting for twothirds of that number. 35% of the world population is regularly using the Internet, thanks to a 566% growth of usage between 2000 and 2012 (Internet World Stats, 2012). Key observations Internet and its expansion create economic and social opportunities, which are especially important for developing economies. There is a significant relationship between the quantity and quality of available Internet infrastructure in a country. Countries with more international connectivity have lower domestic broadband prices, and countries with better domestic infrastructure have lower international bandwidth prices. This makes internet access and use less expensive. Better connectivity is significantly related to higher levels of local digital content creation. Countries with more Internet infrastructure (at all income levels) are also countries which produce more local digital content as measured by Wikipedia entries, web pages under a given country-code, or top-level domain. ICTs can contribute to development if they are harnessed by coherent policies in other areas, such as infrastructure, services, education for capacity creation, etc. Box 1. ICT, the Internet and development: Examples from Africa and Latin America Zain and Ericsson assessed the impacts of mobile phones in Sudan and found that the mobile telecommunications sector is related to demand-side GDP growth rates. In addition, the study finds that this sector accounts for over 40,000 jobs in the Sudanese economy. Telecom Advisory Services LLC find that, based on data from 24 Latin American and Caribbean countries, a rise in broadband penetration might yield a rise in GDP growth, including direct and indirect effects. Similar conclusions about the beneficial effects of ICTs for Latin America were also summarized in a report by the Inter-American Development Bank. Source: OECD et al., 2013; after TAS LLC, 2009; Zain, 2010; IADB, 2011. 2 OECD 2013

COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides Existing empirical studies, including OECD work, suggest a positive link between increasing Internet adoption and use and economic growth, as the Internet can serve as a means for the creation of productive networks (OECD, 2012). It can have an impact on poverty reduction by opening up new economic and market opportunities, and improve health conditions, for example, by providing information on diseases. Furthermore, the Internet can serve as a platform for stakeholders to share information and thus help build global partnerships, and can offer educational insights as well as political and social information. ICTs can also make access to market information available at a lower cost, which can boost competitiveness and entrepreneurship, and in turn impact on economic growth, the creation of enterprises, and social development (Box 1). However, there is still a big digital divide between developed and developing countries. In the African region, penetration rates of mobile networks were only estimated at 41% at the end of 2010 (ITU, 2010) compared to 90% worldwide. Also, in Internet technology, developed countries are a decade ahead of the rest of the world, with developing countries reaching an Internet user penetration rate in 2011 that developed countries reached in 2001 (Figure 1). In 2012, internet penetration in Africa only reached 16%, far behind the world average (34%) and Asia s average (27%) (Internet World Stats, 2012). In other words, developing countries are lacking or underutilising a potential enabler for development. Missing, costly or slow Internet connections are often due to a lack of, or outsourced Internet Exchange Points (IXPs). The IXP is the location where Internet traffic moves between networks based on agreements between network operators, which can make an exchange of data and access very costly. Close to half of the economies in the world do not have such IXP (Figure 2); most African countries still rely on telecommunication firms based in OECD countries or satellite connectivity for their bandwidth access. This leads to slow Internet connections and high costs, as traffic is routed and handled internationally on expensive lines, and transferred across networks, which cost around USD 2 000-5 000 per Mb per month for international bandwidth access (OECD, 2009a). Internationally handled traffic and low penetration ultimately does not only hinder Internet usage per se, but also harms the exchange, production and access to local content, whose characteristic is that it is created and distributed domestically without paying for expensive international data transit. DID YOU KNOW? In 2009, an entry-level fixed (wired) broadband connection in developing countries cost on average USD 190 PPP per month, compared to only USD 28 PPP per month in developed countries (ITU, 2010). Figure 1. The growth of Internet users over time Developed Developing World 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Source: OECD et al., 2013 after ITU. OECD 2013 3

Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT There is a significant relationship between the quantity and quality of available Internet infrastructure in a country. With the development of domestic infrastructure, local IXPs, and local Internet markets, local prices for Internet access drop. Furthermore, with the development of international traffic and connectivity, the price of domestic broadband access also decreases and allows even more people to use this medium, which eventually leads to a better quality of internet services. The role of local content for development A very pertinent example of what mobile ICTs mean for development today and in the future is the case of local content. Local content is defined as being an expression and communication of a community s locally generated, owned and adapted knowledge and experience that is relevant to the community s situation (OECD et al., 2013; after UNESCO, 2001). Local content is thus content available in the local or community s language and can range from data collection to the development of videos (e.g. on YouTube), or informational sources in forms of blogs, Wikipedia, or informational articles. Local content can contribute to the creation, dissemination or preservation of a community s or country s knowledge or tradition and help disseminate important information about security, education, or political situations. Especially if Internet platforms are affordable and accessible, users can develop, use and spread information widely, exchange ideas instantaneously using platforms such as social networking sites, video conferencing, and instant messaging sites, or seek information. A good example is Kenya, where a platform ( Ushahidi, the Swahili word for testimony ) was developed by Kenyan journalists after the presidential election in 2008 to share information on incidents of violence and peace efforts throughout the country. Access to ICTs and general infrastructure influence the recognition, creation, preservation, dissemination and utilisation of local content. There is a strong correlation between the development of network infrastructure 1 and the growth of local content, even after controlling for economic and demographic factors. Collective and co-ordinated policy action in infrastructure, capacity building, education, competition, and access to ICTs is therefore important to facilitate the affordable access to ICT and consequently the development and dissemination of local content. 1 Development of network infrastructure was measured by a large variety of proxies such as: broadband penetration rates, autonomous systems per capita, international bandwidth per capita and routed IPv4 addresses per capita (see OECD et al., 2013). Figure 2. Economies with domestic Internet exchange points (2013) Economies with IXPs - 100 Economies without IXPs - 99 Source: Packet Clearing House (2013). 4 OECD 2013

COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides What has been done and what is to do? Key policy areas for action Given these benefits of ICT development, it is important that policy makers design coherent ICT policies. They should facilitate affordable access to communication technologies and at the same time create synergies with infrastructure, health, education, and other development related policies, to foster local content creation. Policy coherence for development (PCD) provides here a helpful tool to understand and assess the interlinkages of policy sectors and create synergies between ministries, sectors and actors. Policy coherence for development can be instrumental in creating an enabling environment for the development, promotion and usage of ICTs. PCD can contribute to generating comprehensive policy solutions for policymakers in both developed and developing countries, as it aims at exploiting positive synergies and spill overs across public policies, ministries, and actors to foster development. The PCD concept entails the systematic application of mutually reinforcing policies and the integration of development concerns across government departments to achieve development goals along with national policy objectives (OECD, 2011). The following points enumerate the most important policy areas such as competition, infrastructure, technology, education, security, or communication, which are linked to ICT development. These structures, ranging from access and pricing issues to regulation and competition over better cables to connect Internet points, can contribute to fostering ICT development and e-readiness while at the same time supporting the development and usage of local content. Many different ministries, ranging from the Ministry of Communication to the Ministry of Economy or Interior, are implicated in the development of ICTs which is why coordinated approaches across the ministries are needed complementary to policy coherence. Creating a competitive economic environment Competition and market structures have been a successful vector in reducing prices for communication services, improving services and incentivising innovation. The greatest costs and barriers to any country connecting to global Internet are not necessarily traffic exchange relationships (which can be high), but also monopolists in domestic markets charging high prices in the absence of competition (OECD, 2006; OECD et al., 2013). In most OECD countries, the liberalisation of markets led to a dramatic and rapid decrease in prices for international connections and subsequent price declines for end users. Furthermore, it generated benefits such as technological diffusion and new service development (OECD, 2003), and had positive effects on employment, as well as micro-entrepreuneurial and social development opportunities among low income users (OECD, 2009b). In the US, a combination of sound macroeconomic policies, well-functioning institutions and markets, and a competitive economic environment was put at the core of the development of ICT, and made it one of the technologically most advanced countries in the world. In Mexico, on the other hand, as a result of a lack in competition, the OECD estimates a consumer harm of USD 129.2 billion or an average of USD 25.8 billion per year in terms of PPP over the period 2005-09, due to high monopolistic prices. This consumer loss amounts to an equivalent to 1.8% of Mexican GDP per year (OECD, 2012). The development of a competitive market structure for telecommunications should therefore be a priority for policy makers, particularly as they strive to encourage the development of local content and access to all parts of the population. Scaling up infrastructure The country s infrastructure plays a key role in promoting ICTs and fostering local content. Requirements for better networks range from proper buildings, to electricity and power supply, hardware, software, and cables (OECD, 2009a). For example, in some cases, the marginal cost of extending a backhaul connection to an additional community could be much lower than the benefit it could potentially provide. Government investing in road construction or electrification should therefore consider installing the infrastructure for fibre-optic networks at the same time to save on the significant digging costs, as these backhaul networks can support both fixed and mobile Internet connectivity over the last kilometre. By investing in infrastructure and access to Internet, countries will then be able to better make use of the economies of scale and transition more quickly to a middle income economy. The expansion of Internet access, the upgrading of mobile networks for higherspeed data connections, and the installation of fibre connections between cities and to mobile sites, are also important to facilitate community development and the exchange of local content. In that vein, policies that promote domestic Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) are critical especially in developing countries as they can significantly reduce costs by avoiding the fees of using international networks. If operators in developing countries rely as a whole, or to OECD 2013 5

Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT a significant extent, on exchanging traffic in developed countries, i.e. if traffic is diverted from a developing country to the provider in a developed country (e.g. via an undersea cable or international gateway) and sent back, the price for the communication services increases and is then passed on to the customer in developing countries and results in poorer network performance (OECD, 2009a). Access and infrastructure policies should therefore be carefully addressed by both developed and developing countries. This can be undertaken in the form of investment, taxation or subsidies which can be used for installation costs. Developing skills for ICT use ICT policies need to be coupled with education policies and dialogue. ICT policies can help connect rural areas to economic and social hubs, provide information to the most remote areas, and offer free and accessible education to all parts of the world (as, for instance, has been seen with TED Talks or massive open online courses). Infrastructure issues for education, however, remain a main challenge, especially in vast countries, such as India, as electricity and Internet penetration might still be low. Governments, especially ministries of education, should take into consideration the multiple skills needed for ICT use and the creation, recording and distribution of local content, such as knowledge, literacy (e.g. drafting, language, etc.), critical thinking ability and user attitudes. In order to meet these demands, some countries, such as Sri Lanka and Pakistan, have already introduced ICT training seminars in the curriculum to support the capacity to install, administer and use ICT infrastructure and services. In India, ICT skills learning has been mainstreamed in several education initiatives and coupled with CSO partnerships, deregulation, capacity building, content development, and monitoring and evaluation (Kumari, 2010). This puts an end to the traditional classroom practice from some decades ago. Integrating in the global value chain ICT can help countries to move up the global value chain. Rapid technological developments in ICTs are having a profound impact on the way economic activity is organised in general and in particular on how the ICT sector and ICT-related activities are structured. If supported by the necessary policies and infrastructure nationally and abroad, ICTs can contribute to slicing up the value chain and performing activities in any location which helps reduce costs for the company. Furthermore, ICT-enabled trade in services, as well as outsourcing and offshoring of ICT-enabled services, can have significant impact on employment and the trade balance. India in particular has received much attention in this regard, having specialised in ICT business services (OECD, 2013b). Ensuring safe use of ICTs When implementing ICT policies, it is becoming more and more important to put security considerations on the agenda. Intellectual property rights influence ICT development, and technical standards need support from reliable patents to incentivise their development. It is important to find the right balance between the interests of all the relevant stakeholders, including patent holders, implementers of the standard, and endusers while seeking to enable solutions to market-driven needs on a global basis. Policy-makers should aim at providing reassurance to industries that their interests are protected (ITU, 2008). Money transfers (either in form of mobile payments or banking) have been promoted in the last years, such as with M-Pesa in Kenya. However, these efforts still need to be reconciled with suitable policies to prevent money laundering or terrorism financing, but still with a view to facilitate services to the rural population and the poor. Coordination at the national level, with cross-border co-operation and awareness of the balance between security and privacy concerns, is crucial. Furthermore, capacity-building is needed to provide educated security professionals in developing countries who can help coordinate international action (OECD, 2009a). Creating coherent communication policies Communication tools, such as YouTube, blogs, or Wikipedia, only to name a few, can also be important media for the dissemination, creation and preservation of local content. Crowd-sourced content creation and community-developed and peer-reviewed knowledge bases such as Wikipedia allow individuals to exercise greater choice and control over the content they consume, and create possibilities for information and content creation, sharing and dissemination. However, local content can only thrive if access to ICTs is affordable and provided across a large geographical area. Ex-ante investments in infrastructure and capacity building, are therefore crucial to create a platform for local content development. These efforts can then be supported by coherent communication policies. In that vein, freedom of expression, as well as political and cultural rights, also influence communication possibilities, and vice versa. A coherent country level policy approach for ICT development needs to consider these sectors and analyse how they might affect the development of access and use of ICTs and local content. By implementing mutually reinforcing policy actions across the ministries, governments can create synergies conducive to development. Furthermore, the cooperation with and integration of the private and the public sector, as well as civil society organisations can be an important tool for ICT development and local content creation 6 OECD 2013

COHERENCE for DEVELOPMENT Capturing Digital Dividends and Closing Digital Divides and dissemination, as they can support the building of infrastructure, capacity development, and R&D. Yet, fundamental barriers remain until the successful implementation of a whole-of-government approach, as ICT challenges are frequently far beyond the mandates of communication, interior, or technology policy makers. They depend on a close cooperation between the ministries, actors and governments, as well as on geographical factors and political circumstances. Where do we go from here? This Coherence for Development report highlights the interlinkages between the quality and quantity of ICT infrastructure, the links between ICT development and social, economic and political development, and the policies influencing ICT development. It stresses the need to overcome the current digital divide between developed and developing countries and offers solutions to better harness the potential of a variety of policies through policy coherence for development. Affordable Internet access can have positive impacts on the creation, preservation, dissemination and utilisation of local content. Local content, important for the conservation of a community s cultural heritage and the easy access to information, can also contribute to social and economic development and empowerment. However, if access prices are high and infrastructure or capacity not available, local content cannot be accessed and disseminated. Policies should aim at making ICTs accessible to the majority of the population. This includes policies which can be conducive to an enabling environment for ICT and local content creation and can support and harness ICT efforts. Policies such as in the areas of infrastructure, security, taxes, and education are linked to ICT policies and development. ICTs enable developing countries to leapfrog development, organise their public services, and integrate their value chains into the international market faster than ever. Action for decreasing access prices and expanding it to the majority of the population is important, as information technologies can offer important economic and social development opportunities. In all economies, collective and coordinated policy actions across the ministries can facilitate access to ICTs and the development and dissemination of local content, providing opportunities to promote economic growth, expand economic and social opportunities and exchange knowledge in both developing and developed countries. This has also been recognised in the post- 2015 Millennium Development Goals debates, and it will be interesting to follow whether ICTs will become a stand-alone goal or mainstreamed across targets. Given the importance of digital dividends for current challenges and the future, this Policy Brief has stressed the importance of policy coherence for development as helpful for both OECD and developing countries to exploit the development potential ICT policies can offer. Both markets, developing and developed ones, need to implement patent laws which foster the development of ICT. Furthermore, educational policies supporting the development, use and dissemination of ICTs and local content are necessary. As ICT access and infrastructure are important policy areas in the support of ICT and local content, policies in these areas should be carefully addressed by both, developed and developing, markets. OECD countries could contribute to promoting local access to ICTs by significantly reducing transaction costs or the fees of using international networks. Subsidies, taxation, investments or support to developing countries in installing their own IXPs would be helpful and break up monopoly positions still prevalent in some OECD countries. Competition is therefore, as mentioned above, an important issue. OECD 2013 7

The Coherence for Development series is available on the OECD s Internet site: www.oecd.org/development/pcd/ Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development References Internet World Stats (2012), Internet Usage Statistics. The Internet Big Picture. Internet Society (2013), Internet Issues. Internet Exchange Points. ITU (2008), ITU Workshop, Intellectual Property Rights and ICT Standards Implementation. ITU (2010), The World in 2010. ICT Facts and Figures, Geneva. Kumari, Mitakshara and Nilaya Varma (2010), Policy Coherence in ICTs for Education: Examples from South Asia. OECD (2003), Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level 2003. Seizing the Benefits of ICT in a Digital Economy. Paris. OECD (2006), Internet Traffic Exchange: Market Developments and Measurement of Growth, OECD. Paris. OECD (2009a), The Development Dimension. ICTs for Development: Improving Policy Coherence, OECD Publishing. Paris. OECD (2009b), The Development Dimension. Internet Access for Development, OECD Publishing. Paris. OECD (2011), Better Policies for Development. Recommendations for Policy Coherence, OECD Publishing. Paris. OECD (2012), The Impact of Internet in OECD Countries, OECD Digital Economy Papers, No. 200, OECD Publishing. Paris. OECD, ISOC and UNESCO (2013), The Relationship between Local Content, Internet Development and Access Prices, OECD Digital Economy Papers, No. 217, OECD Publishing. Paris. OECD (2013a), Policy Coherence for Inclusive and Sustainable Development, OECD and Post-2015 Reflections, Element 8: Paper 1, Paris. OECD (2013b), ICT-enabled Outsourcing and Offshoring. Paris. Stryszowska, M. (2012), Estimation of Loss in Consumer Surplus Resulting from Excessive Pricing of Telecommunication Services in Mexico, OECD Digital Economy Papers, No. 191, OECD Publishing. Paris. Authors: Piotr Stryszowski (piotr.stryszowski@oecd.org) and Taylor Reynolds (taylor.reynolds@oecd.org), Information, Communications and Consumer Policy Division, OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Industry. Dorothee Georg (dorothee.georg@oecd.org), OECD Policy Coherence for Development Unit, Office of the Secretary-General. For more information about the OECD s work on Policy Coherence for Development, visit the PCD Platform: https://community.oecd.org/community/pcd