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Sustaining Rural Broadband Anjan Ghosh Regional Director - Corporate Affairs July, 4 th, 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "Sustaining Rural Broadband Anjan Ghosh Regional Director - Corporate Affairs July, 4 th, 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sustaining Rural Broadband Anjan Ghosh Regional Director - Corporate Affairs July, 4 th, 2011

2 Intel Confidential 22 Studies show broadband drives economic growth “In low- and middle-income countries, every 10 percentage point increase in broadband penetration corresponds to an increase in economic growth of 1.38 percentage points – more than in high-income countries and more than for other telecommunications services”. World Bank report. 2010 “Because broadband networks have the potential to contribute so much to economic development, they should be widely available at affordable prices and should become an integral part of national development strategies”. World Band, 2009. “Broadband can help generate jobs, growth, productivity and long-term economic competitiveness.” Dr. Toure, Secretary-General ITU “We call for the objective of reaching half of the global population connected to broadband internet by 2015”. Broadband Council declaration endorsed by Secretary-General UNO. NY. Sep 2010 Building Broadband: Strategies and Policies for the Developing World, World Bank, at 2 (Jan. 2010), available at http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTINFORMATIONANDCOMMUNICATIONANDTECHNOLOGIES/Resource s/282822-1208273252769/Building_broadband.pdf

3 Key factors driving adoption BB Plans/Tax/Subsidies policies

4 INTEL CONFIDENTIAL Affordability Digital Literacy 4

5 Intel World Ahead Price of broadband impacts ICT adoption Most of EMs 34 countries needs > one salary Mature Markets 3% income threshold “The main barrier to get access to ICT is the cost of Broadband”. While the cost of Broadband in developed countries is less than 3% of GNI per capita, the average cost in developing economies is 10%+ There are 34 countries where the cost is higher than the monthly income Source: ITU Measuring of ICT development. Feb 2010

6 Intel World Ahead If BB costs 3% or more of income, then, 80% of BRIC+TIM population cannot afford it. Sources: Euro monitor, CIA Fact book, ITU, Intel BB as a % of GNI PPP per capitaPopulation % of Population < 3% 732 M22.4% >3% - <6% 860 M26.3% >6% - <10% 533 M16.3% >10% - <40% 1,145 M35.0% 3,270 M CM

7 INTEL CONFIDENTIAL Affordability Digital Literacy 7

8 Intel Confidential 88 What is it? Community based ICT ed. Program, designed in collaboration with government agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) delivered through community technology centers or school labs.. Target audience Youth (ages 8-25 years) from underserved communities with little or no computer skills Learning objectives Development of 21 st Century Learning Skills: –Technology literacy –Problem solving and other forms of critical thinking –Collaboration and teamwork 10 countries, 1 million learners Intel® Learn

9 Intel Confidential 99 Empowering girls 24 year old Shahana, belonging to an orthodox family in a remote village in the state of Kerala in India. The program not only empowered her as an individual, entrepreneur but also made her a role model for many in her community. She also says that the program has made her a better mother; she wants her own children to imbibe the skills she has learnt. “At the age of 24, I learnt to talk to others. I learnt to express my views in a confident manner. It was like I was reborn” Winner of the Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) woman exemplar award in 2008

10 Intel Easy Steps A basic technology literacy program, for adult learners with little or no experience with computers. Basics of computers, enabling usage to see relevance to daily lives. Internet Search Email Word Processing Spreadsheets Multimedia Empowers learners to communicate with friends, family and business associates though email, research and access information on the Internet, create resumes, flyers, invitations, budgets, business documents, presentations, and more.

11 Intel Confidential 11 Intel Easy Steps: Partners and Target Audience Partner Organizations: Government agencies, community organizations, and local service providers with existing delivery channels Beneficiaries/End Users: Those who need or desire ICT skills for workforce skills and/or economic self-sufficiency. Eg: Rural women Rural entrepreneurs Unemployed/Underemployed Special populations on margins of society Government field staff Others requiring digital literacy for their occupation or civic engagement

12 Intel Confidential 12 Intel® Easy Steps – Some Key Partnerships Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangathan (NYKS) - India (Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports Government of India) Empowering 50K Youth Leaders in 200 districts of India on basic IT skills Digital Empowerment Foundation (DEF) - India DP envisages to create 250K Panchayat websites Make 500K individuals, Panchayat Functionaries ICT literate PRATHAM - India Train more than 80K youths on basic IT skills across 10-15 states of India TESDA- Philippines. Provide digital literacy to 150K graduates across 126 TESDA centers across Philippines. CICT: Commission of ICT Philippines Reach out to 1000 plus CECs for providing access to public services to benefit from ICT in daily life. MSD – Malaysia Reach out to adult populace through over 100 CBC’s Telecenter.org Foundation: Empower women on basic digital literacy, across 40 countries

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