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ICT Policies for the Caribbean: Taking Stock and Setting Priorities. Dr. Heather E. Hudson Professor, ICT Management and Policy Graduate School of Business University of San Francisco. Why are ICTs Important?. Development and ICTs: The Information Connection. Benefits of ICTs
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ICT Policies for the Caribbean: Taking Stock and Setting Priorities Dr. Heather E. Hudson Professor, ICT Management and Policy Graduate School of Business University of San Francisco
Development and ICTs:The Information Connection • Benefits of ICTs • Efficiency: • Saving time and money • Mobile phones! • Online support: logistics, ordering, tracking, etc. • Effectiveness: • Improving quality of services: • e.g. education and health care, customer support • Equity: • Urban and rural; rich and poor; minorities; disabled • Reach: • New markets, new audiences, new sources of supplies • Particular needs of isolated and island states
ICTs and Caribbean Economic Development • Economic Diversification: • Information services, call centres, back offices • More trained and skilled workers • Competiveness: • Tourism: logistics, reservations, marketing • Other existing economic activities • CSME: Caricom Single Market and Economy • 13 members, 6 million population • Free movement of capital, goods, services and people • Common trade and economic policies • Goal to strengthen competitiveness in the global economy
Do Fixed Lines Matter? Perhaps not so much, for basic voice
But fixed lines are still important: For access to Internet For broadband services
Cases: Why Broadband? • Distance education • Educational institutions are major users of Internet access in the Caribbean • UWI is one of the pre-eminent distance learning institutions in the world • Other educational institutions providing online courses and access to distant resources • Training: Using the Internet to share materials • K-Net: serving 25 isolated indigenous settlements in northern Canada • Posting training videos on YouTube • E-based Services • Small countries need educated workforce (see above) and cheap and reliable communications including VOIP • e.g. Bhutan • Population about size of St. Lucia • Landlocked and mountainous • Call centre start-ups using VOIP
Cases: Subsidies for Schools can bring Broadband to Communities ... • Alaska: • More than 200 isolated villages • Highest per capita recipient of USF E-Rate funds • E-Rate provides discounts for Internet access to schools and libraries • Alaskan operator has used schools as anchor tenant • WiFi coverage from schools now covers most villages • Price for village access no greater than urban access • Macedonia • Newly independent country in Adriatic • Had monopoly provider and low Internet access • Seed funding from USAID to provide Internet to schools • Project included policy: opening market to competition • Competitive bids to provide service • Resulted in Macedonia becoming first “wireless broadband country” • Now more than 30% of population are subscribers
Getting to Broadband: Lessons from the Mobile Explosion • Competition is key • Lower prices • Innovative strategies: e.g. prepaid, commodity prices • Demand may be much greater than assumed • Farther down the economic pyramid • Old Distinctions no longer Relevant • Fixed vs. mobile: • Mobile phones as first and only phones • What is E-mail? • SMS (short message service): Poor person’s (everyone’s?) e-mail? • Mobile phone as platform for many services • Convergence: Voice, data, video • What is voice? • Bits are bits • VoIP Telephony • What is video? • Broadcast vs. IPTV
Getting to Broadband:Strategies for Policy and Regulators • Facilitate • Allow competition wherever feasible • Allow use of new technologies • E.g. WiFi, VOIP for cheap Internet access and telephony • Do not mandate unnecessary stumbling blocks • Reduce local barriers • e.g. permits for rights of way • Local fees and taxes, duties • Be Flexible • One size may not fit all • Waivers • Listen to the Users (or would-be users) • Collaborate • Other regulatory authorities • Competition, trade, local governments
Strategies: Public/Private Partnerships • Infrastructure • E.g. government to use commercial (public) networks, not build own networks • Government as anchor tenant • May drive demand for new services • Economic Development • Strategies to encourage investment in target regions • Incentives to operators • Applications • Target sectors such as education, health care, government services • Build on demand from other services • Audio/video downloads • Social networking • Games? • ASK YOUNG PEOPLE!
For more information:hudson@usfca.eduwww.usfca.edu/fac-staff/hudsonFrom Rural Village to Global Village