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ICTs, Development and Knowledge: Where are we today?
Raúl Zambrano | Riyadh | Knowledge Economy 24-25 April 2014
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Contents ICTs: where are we today? What we know today Knowledge and
Development Way Forward
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Evolution of ICTs
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ICT for Development (ICTD): Evolution
Four phases since 1990: Infrastructure, connectivity and access -1991 Content and local capacity building -1996 Applications (e-government, e-commerce etc.) Web 2.0 (social networks, etc.) - 2005 Each phase emerges from and builds upon the previous one
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Technology Diffusion ICTs have changed dramatically in the last 20 years Developing countries can easily adopt and adapt the new technologies... ...but face serious challenges for its massive diffusion
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ICTs: Digital Divide Reflection of existing socio-economic divides
Assumes ICTs are an end on themselves Make ICTs just another “consumers” good Emphasize potential ICTs have as a catalyst to tackle traditional development gaps
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ICTs: Efficiency vs. Transformation
ICTs as efficiency tool cost reductions, scale economic perspective ICTs also transform existing processes and create new ways of doing things qualitative changes networking ¨The essence of technology is by no means anything technological¨ (Heidegger)
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The knowledge “effect”
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How did this happen?
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Traditional e-government is not delivering
By the end of 2010, over 60 billion USD were invested on e-government In developing countries, over 60% of e-government projects fail (35% are considered total failures) Characterized by: uncoordinated, sectoral interventions technology focused (usually high-end) supply driven do not reach citizens/stakeholders
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Citizen-Centric Approach:
Dual Role of Citizens
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Open Government
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Knowledge and Development
History tell us that knowledge dissemination is a catalyst for development But countries must have the capacities to harness knowledge New ICTs are facilitating this but are no panacea Towards and economy of intangible goods?
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Pillars of a Knowledge Economy
Governments: efficient, responsive, transparent, setting policies and regulatory environment Human capacity: local human resources with capacity to understand, adopt, adapt and innovate R&D ecosystem : based on the above, involving key players, driven by innovation ICT ecosystem: not just infrastructure but also applications, platforms and innovative solutions
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Role of ICTs Lowers barriers to entry
“Digitizes” tangible goods -not all Furnishes new solutions to old problems Transforms process, promotes innovation But are not an end on themselves!
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Way forward Policy matters!! Issue goes beyond ICTs
Integration into national development plans From consumers to producers! Maximize youth ingenuity, innovation
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Way forward Invest on strategic R&D/S&T areas
Create/strengthen a cadre of S&T experts Learn from others Public private partnerships Lead by example, foster South South and Triangular cooperation
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Thank you! @raulza
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