SA 'not leveraging ICT'
SA's lack of ICT readiness means the
economy is not benefiting as much as it should from technology, and social
impacts are “disappointing”. SA ranks behind 71 other countries surveyed by the
World Economic Forum on network readiness, and its digitisation has been found
to be “constrained”. The World Economic Forum's recently-released Global
Information Technology Report 2012 has found SA ranks second in sub-Saharan
Africa behind Mauritius, which comes in at 53, while SA ranks at 72 out of 142
countries based on network readiness. SA “is not yet leveraging the potential
benefits associated with ICT”, notes the report. It cites important
shortcomings in terms of basic skills availability in large segments of the
population. It also states that the high costs of accessing “insufficiently
developed” ICT infrastructure have led to poor rates of ICT use. “As a
result, the economic impacts accruing from ICT are patchy and the social
impacts disappointing,” says the report. It argues that upgrading overall
skills at all layers of society and increasing efforts to build affordable
infrastructure for all would allow SA to increase its ICT readiness and uptake,
which would spread ICT impacts across society.
Falling behind
In terms of digitisation, SA is seen
as a constrained economy, ranking among other countries such as Algeria,
Vietnam, Madagascar and Burkina Faso. Emerging economies include Georgia, China
and Botswana. The report notes that countries in the transitional phase, moving
towards advanced, include Iran, Serbia and Argentina, while advanced economies
include New Zealand, Greece, Poland and other European states. According to the
report, which cites other studies, a 10% increase in mobile broadband would aid
SA's economy to grow by between 1% and 1.8%. About 28 000 new jobs and an
additional 1.8% in gross domestic product could be generated by 2015 if enough
spectrum is allocated. The report does not specify what would be sufficient
spectrum; however, mobile operators have been clamouring for access to
high-demand frequency in the 800MHz and 2.6GHz ranges. Towards the end of last
year, the Independent Communications Authority of SA issued draft invitations
to apply for high-demand spectrum in the bands, as well as a draft frequency
plan. In March, the regulator said it was postponing licensing until “further
notice” to ensure that communications minister Dina Pule's policy direction on
high-demand spectrum is “taken into consideration”.
More needed
BeƱat Bilbao, associate director at
the World Economic Forum, says SA needs to make a strong effort to leverage
ICT. It needs to improve ICT infrastructure and increase the level of ICT
education so that more people can participate in the Internet economy. Bilbao
says SA's ICT readiness is not as high as it should be and there are
infrastructure weaknesses when it comes to broadband access. In addition, says
Bilbao, broadband access is still too expensive and there are not enough ICT
skills within the education system, which drags down Internet readiness among
SA's citizens. Internet penetration, at 12.3%, is low, says Bilbao. He says
businesses are using ICT well, which enables them to integrate into the broader
economic system. Ovum's senior analyst of emerging markets, Richard Hurst, says
the report shows SA has failed to realise any of the positive impacts of ICT on
both the socio-economic and skills front. “We have been aware of the skills
issue for a long time now, and still we are failing to give this the right
attention.” Bilbao explains that, because the methodology has changed from the
previous report, comparisons cannot be drawn as to whether SA's rank has slipped.
Source: IT Web, South Africa
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