Legislation, policies, plans, strategies, regulation Rohan Samarajiva Yangon, 26 July 2014 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
E-Strategies and ICT Infrastructure Policies and Regulations ITU-WTO Workshop Geneva Dec Mostafa Terrab, infoDev.
Advertisements

GAMBIA COMPETITION COMMISSION GAMBIA COMPETITION COMMISSION Levelling the Field for Development BY : EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 5 TH JUNE 2013.
Independent regulation: Why it’s needed for sector growth Rohan Samarajiva Yangon, 26 July 2014 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from.
Why and how of ICT policy, strategy and plans Rohan Samarajiva Nagarkot, March 2015 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International.
Regulatory Frameworks in OECD countries and their Relevance for India Nick Malyshev Senior Counsellor Public Governance and Territorial Development OECD.
Chapter 5 Vocabulary.
THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL By Miss Holler. The Right to Vote  Because the Constitution did not specify who had the right to vote, each state was given the opportunity.
Aid and the Business Environment Mushtaq H. Khan, Department of Economics, SOAS, University of London DIIS, Copenhagen, 2 nd December 2014.
Parliamentary Law Making
Parliamentary and Presidential Democracies
 The writers of the Constitution wanted the national government and states to share power  This sharing of power is called FEDERALISM.
THE ROLE OF Young people IN the Democratic process Presentation by Henry Charles, Regional Director of the Commonwealth Youth Programme Caribbean Centre.
Partnering for Growth WEF 11 September 2005 Influencing the Policy Debate The South African Challenges and Successes.
 Governmental power and functions in the United States rest in 3 branches of government:  Legislative Branch:  Article I of the Constitution  Executive.
Chapter 9 Key Content Terms and Introduction. Chapter 9 Key Content Terms Popular Sovereignty: the principle that the authority of the government is created.
The Three Branches of the U. S
A Small Business Act for Europe Podgorica, 26 May 2008 Edward TERSMETTE.
The Six Basic Principles
What is the significance of ICTs to legislators? Rohan Samarajiva Yangon, 26 July 2014 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International.
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2
Review Sec 3 & 4 Chp. 3. Please select a Team. 1.Team 1 2.Team 2 3.Team 3 4.Team 4 5.Team 5.
Commonwealth Asia Regional Conference on Investing in Youth Employment (22-24 February 2011, Colombo) The CYP Asia Centre in collaboration with the Ministry.
Regulatory Impact Analysis – Lebanon Working Group IV: Focus Group on Public Service Delivery, Public-Private Partnership and Regulatory Reform Amman,
Challenges to Security Sector Reform Roland Friedrich DCAF Consultant 30 July 2005.
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc.Slide 3 Chapter 1, Section 2 Learning Objectives 1.Classify governments.
E-Transformation Turkey Project State Planning Organization March 17, 2005 Interoperability and Metadata Workshop Ankara, Turkey.
The Principles of the U.S. Government Describe the principles of government and the ways American constitutionalism preserves individual rights.
 We ___ ______ of ___ _______ ______, __ order __ ____ a _____ _______ ______, ________ _______, ______ __________ tranquility, _______ for ___ ______.
Chapter 7 The public interest: A n abstraction about what advances the welfare of the population. Types of interest groups: Business (large and small,
Special Railways Phase III Proposed approach to regulatory changes Jakarta 16 May 2011.
LIRNEasia and its research Rohan Samarajiva, Executive Director Usable knowledge for growing the sector: ICT policy and regulation research from LIRNEasia,
The World Bank January 12, 2005 Legislative Oversight Mozammal Hoque Sr. Financial Management Specialist AFTFM The World Bank.
Regulatory Management and Reform in India Siddhartha Mitra and Vijay Vir Singh.
USA / Canada’s Government style. Limited Government Although they are both limited governments, they are very different in style and make up.
United States Government Basics
IW:LEARN TDA/SAP Training Course Module 2: Development of the TDA.
Chapter 7 Vocabulary. constitution Document that sets out the laws and principles of a government.
 We ___ ______ of ___ _______ States, __ order __ ____ a _____ _______ union, ________ justice, ______ __________ tranquility, _______ for ___ ______.
 Authoritarian: a government in which one leader or group of people holds absolute power.  Absolute Monarchy: a monarch that has complete and unlimited.
Chapter 7/8 Creating the American Republic Vocabulary.
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2. Objectives 1.Classify governments according to three sets of characteristics. 2.Define systems of government.
The Constitution Chapter 3. Outline The Constitution sets out the basic principles upon which government in the United States was built. The Constitution.
Limited government- federalism- checks and balances- separation of powers- popular sovereignty- What are the five principles of the Constitution? The belief.
Ch. 1 Sec. 2 Principles of Government
Presentation to the Public-Private Partnerships in Highways Workshop
IW:LEARN TDA/SAP Training Course
A system of checks and balances
What is the significance of ICTs to Union legislators?
Chapter 8 Review Mr. Klein.
National e-Agriculture Strategy Implementation From Vision to Action
Legislation, policies, plans, strategies, regulation
Citizen Participation
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2
Political Organization of Chile
Course on Regulatory Design and Practice
A System of Checks and Balances
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2
Chapter 3: Vocabulary The Constitution
Presidential Democracy & Parliamentary Democracy
Branches of the U.S. Government
The “Un Written” Constitution & Chapter Review
Once America had gained independence from England, they needed to design a system of government. The Founding Fathers, the framers of the Constitution,
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2
A System of Checks and Balance
A System of Checks and Balances
A System of Checks and Balances
A System of checks and balances
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Section 2
A System of Checks and Balances
Separation of Powers (Balance of powers)
Presentation transcript:

Legislation, policies, plans, strategies, regulation Rohan Samarajiva Yangon, 26 July 2014 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International Development Research Centre, Canada and the Department for International Development UK..

Objective Clarify different government functions and demarcation of responsibilities in ICT infrastructure and services/applications 2

ICT infrastructure (telecom) Clarity re different functions and demarcation of responsibilities is important because – Multiple private players are active – Market and technology conditions change rapidly and – Large investments are at stake 3

ICT services and applications Clarity re different functions and demarcation of responsibilities is important because – Even more private players are active, and – Market and technology conditions change rapidly Optimal sequence of actions may be different 4

DEFINITIONS 5

The framework Is the supreme law, the Constitution 6

Myanmar Constitution 2008 The three branches of sovereign power namely, legislative power, executive power and judicial power are separated, to the extent possible, and exert reciprocal control, check and balance among themselves. Art. 11(a) – Does not follow Westminster Model where separation of legislative and executive functions is somewhat fuzzy – Except that President is not directly elected, but is elected by an electoral college made up of legislators – Legislators can become Ministers, but they cease to be legislators when they do. Art. 232(i) 7

Law is... Made and amended by Parliament Subordinate to the Constitution, the Telecommunications Law (2013 Union Parliament Law No. 31) sets out the broad principles and powers – Not expected to be changed frequently, though ICT sector laws become obsolete quickly – Rules made under a Law spell out details and allow greater flexibility 8

Policy, plan and strategy are... Adopted by the Executive; subordinate to Law Policy sets out what must be done and justifies why it must be done Plans, which are more concrete and short- term, provide the strategy by which the policy is to be implemented – Plans define how the necessary actions will be taken by whom and when so that the policy objectives may be realized 9

Regulation is... “Sustained and focused control by a public agency over activities in a sector” – Restraining – Enabling More on why regulatory agencies should be independent later 10

ICT INFRASTRUCTURE SECTOR 11

Why policy? Some countries manage without formal policy – Sri Lanka’s telecom policy is from 1994 – Bangladesh is from 1998 Both are almost completely obsolete – India adopted a formal National Telecom Policy in 2012, after 13 years But, a formal policy, adopted after due consultation, serves as a guide to private investors and stakeholders and reduces uncertainty, especially in infrastructure  encourages investment 12

13 Pakistan

Foreign Direct Investment in Pakistan by sector, Source: State Bank of Pakistan (2008; Mobile cellular policy

ICT SERVICES & APPLICATION SECTOR: AN EXAMPLE 15

E Sri Lanka program 2001 economic and political crisis  new reform government; President & Prime Minister from opposing parties Prime Minister keen to emulate Hyderabad and create white-collar jobs in IT enabled services Young, dynamic Minister with strong international credentials given charge of Information Technology, not Telecom 16

Starting with a program World Bank aid sought to formulate an integrated ICT development program for Sri Lanka, mid 2002 – Cross-sectoral effort; first time for World Bank – Local team actively participated in design – Infrastructure reforms to end contested exclusivity for international telecom services were being implemented in parallel 17

Program architecture 18 E leadership Infrastructure E society E government E business

Diagnosing road blocks Existing organization, CINTEC, was unable to perform apex function – New agency? – What to do with old one? Coordinating with multiple government agencies to advance e government was seen as the greatest challenge – Authority higher than individual Ministers? 19

Different sequence Program design, inclusive of policy, plan and strategy Informal linkage to related telecom policy Law followed 20