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Explore the impactful role of ICT in Africa's economic development through transformative strategies. Discover key initiatives, goals, and case studies to harness the power of technology for socio-economic progress.
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ITU Workshop on “ICT Innovations in Emerging Economies” (Tunis, Tunisia, 28 – 31 January 2014) Strategic Application of ICT for Economic Development in Africa ALI YAHIAOUI , Chief ICT Officer, African Development Bank a.yahiaoui@afdb.org ali.yahiaoui1505@gmail.com
Presentation Outline • AfDB Group Overview • Connect Africa Summit –Kigali 2007 • Transform Africa Summit – Kigali 2013 • Strategic Application of ICT in Africa -E-Transform Africa Study
AfDB Focus and Strategy Governance Infrastructure Regional Integration Private sector Development Higher Education and Science & Technology
Strategic Thrust for the Bank’s ICT Medium Term Strategy & Action Plan Medium -term Focus ICT Priority Areas Country Focus Gender, climate change
2. Connect Africa Summit 2007 • In 2007 Connect Africa Summit in Kigali, five goals were set : • Goal 1: Interconnect all African capitals and major cities with ICT broadband infrastructure and strengthen connectivity to the rest of the world by 2012 • Goal 2: Connect African villages to broadband ICT services by 2012 and implement initiatives such as community telecentres and villages phones • Goal 3: Adopt key regulatory measures that promote affordable, widespread access to a full range of broadband ICT services • Goal 4: Support the development of a critical mass of ICT skills required by the knowledge economy through the establishment of ICT centers of excellence and ICT-capacity building and training centers • Goal 5: Adopt a national e-strategy, including a cyber security framework, and deploy at least one flagship e-government service as well as e-education and e-health services using accessible technologies in each country in Africa by 2012, with the aim of making multiple e-government and other e-services widely available by 2015.
3. Transform Africa Summit –Kigali 2013 • From 2007 – 2013 Africa concentrated on building ICT national broadband backbone/regional infrastructures • Objectives of the Trans –Africa Summit: • To pool together International participants to set a new agenda for Africa to leapfrog development challenges through the use and uptake of Broadband and related services. • To leverage on the progress registered in connectivity since the Connect Africa Summit and use technology to reduce poverty, enhance participation, improve service delivery and create prosperity for our people • To accelerate sustainable socioeconomic development on the continent and usher Africa into the knowledge economy through affordable access to Broadband and usage of Information and Communications Technologies (ICT).
Transform Summit 2013.. • Outcome of the Summit • The Transform Africa Summit agreed on a manifesto comprising five principles. • Principle 1: To put ICT at the center of our national socio-economic development agenda • Principle 2: To improve access to ICT especially Broadband to build on the continent’s progress in connectivity especially in underserved areas • Principle 3: To improve accountability, efficiency and open Develop and implement national e-Government policies and open Data initiatives. • Principle 4: To put the Private Sector First: foster an enabling environment for private investments to drive job creation, productivity and competitiveness supported. • Principle 5: To leverage ICT to promote sustainable development
4. eTransform Africa Study: Objectives • Take stock of emerging uses and applications of ICTs that are having transformative effects on social and economic development • Identify key ICT applications (Africa and worldwide) that have the potential for replications and scaling up • Identify constraints that negatively impact ICT adoption and scaling up, including in policy and regulatory environment • Develop a common framework among stakeholders, development partners and the donor community for future ICT interventions
Lessons from the eTransform sectoral studies • i. Agriculture • Case studies : • Analysis of the use of RFID tags for tracking livestock in Botswana • ICT sensor networks used in water management for irrigation • The cases show how ICT can help address some of the challenges facing agriculture and food security in Africa. • Esoko( in Ghana) is another good example of ICT in improving agricultural market information services • ii. Climate Change • Case studies: Malawi, Senegal and Uganda. • ICTs role to the impacts of climate change on the potential consequences of climate change, vulnerability to projected impacts, identifying priorities for adaptation
Lessons from the sectoral studies • iii. Education • Case studies in South Africa and Uganda. • A critical element concerns : • - access learning materials and collaboration platforms. • - Connectivity for accessing learning resources. • iv. Health • Case studies of Ethiopia and Mali. • Example: as exemplified by the IKON teleradiology program in Mali. • v. Modernizing Government through ICT • Case studies: • Integrated financial management systems in Malawi; • electronic tax filing in South Africa.
Lessons from the sectoral studies vi. Financial Services • Case studies : Senegal, Kenya. • Mobile banking has reached a tipping point in Africa and now is the time for policy makers to act boldly. • Financial inclusion has improved in Kenya - where active bank accounts have grown fourfold since 2007 aided by some 17 million M-PESA mobile money accounts.
Lessons from the sectoral studies • Regional trade and Integration • The cross-cutting study included case studies of Botswana, Kenya and Senegal • The studies focused • on ICT use in • governance, logistics • and cross-border • information exchange • mechanisms. ICTs and trade – the supporting environment
Lessons from the sectoral studies viii. ICT Competitiveness Case studies of Kenya, Morocco and Nigeria. Provided the African ICT market continues its impressive double-digit growth, the market could be worth more than US$150 billion by 2016.
5. CONCLUSION • Africa’s challenge for this decade is to build on the mobile success story and broadband progress to complete the transformation. • Now is the time for rigorous evaluation, replication, innovation and scaling up of best practice. • To be able to do this it will require: • i) reducing the cost of access for mobile broadband • ii) supporting government private-sector collaboration • iii) improving the eCommerce environment • iv) enhancing ICT labor market skills • v) encouraging innovative business models that drive employment, such as microwork and BPO • vi) creating spaces that support ICT entrepreneurship, such as ICT incubators, and local ICT development clusters.