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Published byPolly McDonald Modified over 9 years ago
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Towards a National ICT Strategy Mike Eldon Chairman, KEPSA ICT Board/KIF Governor, KEPSA
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The story so far NIC 2020 – No mention of ICT at all. PRSP – Separate ICT SWG. Others ignore ICT. NDP – No one noticed any of it. ERS – Acknowledged lack of ICT focus, resources...
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Kenya ICT Policy 2000None 2001PRSP 2002None 2003ERS (brief bullets) 2004At last, we hope… and an e-Gov strategy already Necessary, but not sufficient
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Those wonderful Rwandese 2001: WSIS-compliant, ECA-enabled 2001-5 ICT policy and plan approved by cabinet Now implementing: learning from doing President as champion Rwanda IT Authority (RITA) Presidential ICT adviser Government retreat to harmonise ICT priorities and resources Dec 2004: All senior civil servants to be IT literate and connected… or ‘they won’t be there’
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and… Full telcom liberalisation (VSAT*, VOIP) Universal service fund Unified utilities regulator All ICT products zero tax rated *Any ISP can have a VSAT international gateway
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ie, they have… a policy a plan a champion a home resources … and they’re moving
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Private sector and others - filling the vacuum CSK, TESPOK, ITSA, KIS, ISACA, CCOAK, KISE, E-Commerce Association NSE, KEPSA, ICT Board/KIF Not to mention: Civil society Research and academic institutions Development partners
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KIF Vision and Mission Vision To achieve a high quality of life for Kenyans, and national competitiveness, by stimulating effective ICT policy, strategy and usage Mission To partner with other stakeholders in advising and influencing government to develop & implement an effective national ICT strategy
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KIF’s horizontal partnerships Sister KEPSA Boards Civil Society Research & academic institutions Government Development partners International AITEC Inclusive
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Vertical integration KEPSA KIF Constituent Associations Support & Escalation NOT duplication or competition
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Bottom up strategy from sectors: the KIF/IDRC programme Outputs ICT committees for KEPSA Sector Boards ICT sector strategies Proof of concept project proposals Awareness and Empowerment Mobilisation and support Integration and Synergy Motivation and Enthusiasm
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KIF also worries about... Cost-justified budget/MTEF proposals Infrastructure Standards and syllabi e-Commerce ICT export services Office equipment
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Other KIF values Focus on reducing the digital divide, on wealth creation, on competitiveness... and hence on poverty reduction Learning by doing Results and impact
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Relating to government Ups and downs Yearning for earlier, deeper more sustained engagement
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Roles as defined in draft National ICT Policy Government – Enabling policies, conducive to private sector investment Development partners – Build capacity, in collaboration with GoK Civil society – Inform policy making (access, learning, poverty, governance)
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…and Consumers – Participate in development, application, setting standards; ensuring consumer protection Regulator – Issue licences – Tariffs, interconnections – Standards – Frequency management; numbering;.ke domain
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… and the private sector Investors, operators, service providers – Develop an efficient ICT sector – Commercial integrity – Strong corporate governance – High quality standards – Participate in provision of universal access Stern parent - Naughty child
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Bottom line Government: makes policy Operators: operate!
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What about Public Private Partnerships??? Parent - Child to Adult - Adult
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The way ahead ICT Sector Working Group Ministerial e-Government Committees National Economic and Social Council, & Sector Economic and Social Councils National ICT Advisory Council… or ‘Presidential Commission on Information Society and Development’ Where does the private sector fit in?
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Composition of proposed Presidential Commission 11 Permanent Secretaries CEOs of major ICT companies NGO representatives Other relevant individuals KEPSA / KIF / Professional Associations? Public / Private proportion? Chair?
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Current policy issues Properly define economic impact of ICT Next stage of telcom/Internet liberalisation e-Commerce masterplan/legislation e-Government Human resource development – work force of today – work force of tomorrow
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From policy to strategy Policy: Vision, principles and guidelines Strategy: Implementation plan - who’s got to do what by when; benefits and cost
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Strategy priorities National champion; e-envoy High-level, one-stop government home Human and financial resources Legislation and regulation Liberalisation and privatisation Proof of concept projects
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Operationalising strategy Mobilising/integrating the partners Think tank for issue management Project facilitation Performance management (M&E) Strategy reviews/updates Capacity building Resource mobilisation
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ICT - still a minority sport We need all the help we can get
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