1 / 35

Issues of the Digital Divide

Issues of the Digital Divide. Digital Divide Defined. In 1970’s NGO’s warned of growing gap between haves and have-nots Universal Service and Universal Access in the telecommunications tradition. Digital Divide Defined.

chipo
Download Presentation

Issues of the Digital Divide

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Issues of the Digital Divide

  2. Digital Divide Defined • In 1970’s NGO’s warned of growing gap between haves and have-nots • Universal Service and Universal Access in the telecommunications tradition

  3. Digital Divide Defined • “. . .an inequality in access, distribution, and use of information and communication technologies between two or more populations.” (p. 300) • Can be within one nation-state or among many (Intranational vs. International)

  4. The Global Divide: Access • Physical Access--Where are the ICTs? • Financial Access--Who can afford them? • Cognitive Access--What can they utilize? • Design Access--How well can they interpret? • Content Access--What is relevant? • Production Access--What can they contribute? • Institutional Access--What bodies help or hinder them? • Political Access--Who participates in the decisions?

  5. Global Divide: Beyond Access • Distinction between Formal and Informal Access • Participation and Engagement more key to the issues • Average citizens vs. Information champions • The more active the information champions, the more evolved the “knowledge society”

  6. Demographic Issues • Access is correlated with • Income • Education • Urban proximity • Age • Gender • Ethnicity • Occupation

  7. The Costs of ICT Applications Applications Software Hard Infrastructure Soft Infrastructure Training Awareness Basic Education

  8. Perspectives on the Divide • Optimists, Pessimists, Structuralists • The state of the current ICT gap • Predictive Trends in ICT and economic trends • Relationship between patterns of ICT inequality and economic inequality • Impact of ICT’s on economic growth • Domestic Shifts brought on by ICT diffusion • Causes of successful diffusion in LCD’s

  9. Widening the Divide--Findings • Access Gaps Primarily • Physical • Financial • Content • Cognitive

  10. Widening the Divide--Findings • R&D/Intellectual Property—”Haves” control 97% of world’s patents • GDP closely associated with ICT access • Growth rates are as divergent as current comparative statistics • 23 % for the Haves • 18% for the Have-nots

  11. Widening the Divide-Findings • Wilson concludes that ICT’s are a major factor in widening income disparity over the past decade • Yet he also asserts there is no link between level of ICT usage and level of economic growth. Why?

  12. Widening the Divide • Optimists: might be correct on domestic diffusion, but internationally the findings show the gap widening • Pessimists: Findings seem to support their claims • Structuralists: Supported in that ICT trends follow general global trends

  13. Widening the Divide: Corrupt Elites (Would you do business with this man?) Askar Akayev, former President of Kyrgyzstan (Rule of Law and Protection for civil liberties is critical to ensure equal access. )

  14. Laws of ICT’s • Moore’s Law • Cost of technology platforms go down the longer they are on the market and as production stays constant • Metcalfe’s Law • “Power of the network increases exponentially by the number of computers connected to it” • Wilson’s Law • “The actual and opportunity costs of exclusion from an interactive community are multidimensional, increase over time, and are borne by both the excluded and society as a whole.”

  15. Costs of Exclusion • Consumption/Investment opportunities • Higher costs for goods and services • Lack of access to knowledge as the ICT’s become increasingly complex • Less information re: employment, investments, consumer goods • Decline in social cohesion and connectedness • Less active participation in government and society

  16. Costs of Exclusion • Exclusion costs will increase over time as some citizens join the network and others stay put.

  17. How to Narrow the Divide? • Encourage investment in human capital • Low levels of government distortion and corruption • Respect for the rule of law and property rights • Sustain an enabling environment for democratic rights and civil liberties

  18. Digital Divide Issues-Brazil • Despite increasing ICT development within Brazil, poor Brazilians fall behind due to • Lack of equipment • Education and Training • Illiteracy “This was not a first world problem-we were not going to find a Swedish or Swiss company to solve it for us” –Moura Campos

  19. “What Divide?” The Case of China • Wilson attributes the lack of official recognition of divide issues to the following: • Rise of middle class in China put the poor in the shadows • Increase in education/training communicate perception of access and equity • “Politically incorrect” subject due to security concerns.

  20. Strategic Restructuring

  21. Restructuring the Global System We know why *they* care……… But why does *she*???

  22. Why Does the Private Sector Care? • Assessing short/medium term priorities and calculating material, ideological, and political interests lead to private companies wanting to open new markets and protect creative interests.

  23. The Thatcher/Reagan Revolution • Strategic restructuring of • Property Rights • Governance rules • Efficiency rules • Distributional norms Comrades-in-Arms?

  24. The Clinton Administration • Political support from the private sector • Al Gore champions challenge to public/monopolist telecommunications to expand access and partner with private sector • Why would public leadership advocate giving up their own power?

  25. Core Principles of Restructuring Opening national ICT/Telecom Markets to foreign investment Permitting Telecom to be a traded service Ensuring promarket regulatory structures

  26. Influences of the Private Sector • When in conflict, private sector companies choose to prioritize rule-making over distribution. • New rules concerning IP, efficiency & private sector leadership constrain any efforts to divide equitably. • Above influence is exacerbated by the shift from state power to private control with ICT’s.

  27. Influences of the Private Sector • Power shift • Handling new policy issues • Achieving common business positions • Private-public methods of forming global policy networks • Individual leaders shaping policy (Bill Gates)

  28. Continuing Issues • Internet Governance (ICANN) • E-Commerce as a regulated industry • Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)

  29. Distributional Issues Addressed • Private business organizations conclude: • Divide is a result of bad government policy • Private sector best solves inequities • Digital divides are really Digital opportunities • Partnership are important, but Governments should play supporting roles to private interests • Global Information Infrastructure Commission (GIIC) • Global Business Dialogue (GBD(e))

  30. Distributional Issues Addressed • The Group of Eight Summits (G8) • 2000 Meeting: Japan selecting digital divide • Prompts Clinton Administration to produce policy and include non-profit and NGO actors in process • Representatives from Developing nations invited for the first time

  31. Distributional Issues Addressed • Group of Eight 2000 Summit Results • Government set up task forces • Mobilized high-level interest worldwide • Included NGO’s and previously excluded actors • Brought legitimacy to advocacy concerns of developing countries, but also revealed lack of expertise.

  32. Distributional Issues Addressed • Private Firms • Commercial Activities (export and marketing of goods and services) • Philanthropic Activities (“community development”) • Mixed Activities (training to build a population’s cognitive base)

  33. Distributional Issues Addressed • Grassroots Activities • Companies and NGO’s driven by social concerns Peoplink.Org Greenstar

  34. Distributional Issues-Microfinance Fatima Sarwoni of Namunsi, Uganda The Village “Phone Lady” Grameen Bank: http://www.gfusa.org

  35. Questions in Lieu of Conclusions • Why Does the Private Sector Care? • How Important is the Digital Divide? • Is the Digital Divide Narrowing? • What Does the Digital Divide Mean? • Who Should Take Action? • What are the Obstacles?

More Related