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Lessons from e-business and household use: Balancing broadband and applications Internet use in the Americas CIDE, Mexico City 16-17 June, 2005. Graham Vickery, OECD. Presentation. OECD Information Technology Outlook 2004 ICT access and use by firms
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Lessons from e-business and household use:Balancing broadband and applicationsInternet use in the AmericasCIDE, Mexico City16-17 June, 2005 Graham Vickery, OECD
Presentation OECD Information Technology Outlook 2004 • ICT access and use by firms • ICT access and use by individuals and households Policy overview • ICT policies in OECD countries • OECD Council Recommendation on Broadband Development, 2004 • OECD Work on digital broadband content
Beyond the hype:From broadband access to efficient use Lessons from the OECD Information Technology Outlook 2004 “Broadband as utility: Striking the balance between content and infrastructure”
Firms: High ICT access, still working towards widespread efficient use • Wide diffusion of computers and Internet in government and enterprises of all sizes and all sectors in OECD countries. • Differences between large and small enterprises and sectors. • Strong cyclical rise in 2004 ICT spending. • E-commerce growth sustained – slower than initially expected. • Integrated ICT-enabled business processes -- depending on sectors, little implementation. • Mostly information search and supply and email. • Low integrated use along value chains and in R&D / production • E-business “divide” in applications between small and large firms.
E-business development phases • Phase 1: Website for company • Phase 2: Information on products and/or price • Phase 3: Orders received through the Internet or electronic networks • Phase 4: Delivery of goods /services and/or customer services • Phase 5: Couple electronic orders with ICT system (financial, logistics, marketing) • Phase 6: Couple with customer ICT systems (stock administration) CBS (2003), Dutch statistical office (percentage of firms).
High business connectivity but low e-commerce adoption, 2003
High business connectivity but lowe-business adoption, 2003 OECD based on Eurostat.
Impact of ICTs on businesses • ICTscan increase business performance and productivity. • Not automatic translation into effective use and positive impacts. • Innovation in organisational capabilities, improvement of human capital, are necessary conditions for maximising impacts. • Benefit-cost analyses rare. Few studies of broadband impacts, e.g. money saved, shorter cycle times, customer satisfaction, etc. • Obstacles: • Strategic clarity among top management to link e-business with business strategies • Organisational and product innovations • Skills investments • Metrics to assess ICT impacts.
b.Households: Increasing access and slowly moving to more complex applications • PCs diffused quite slowly in households. • Broadband diffusion rapidly, building on the installed PC base, and Internet diffusion • Lack of need or interest and costs main reasons for not equipped. • Internet use evolving, influenced by the supply of broadband and new access devices, and by educational attainment. • E-mail remains the principal activity. Focused information search, obtaining news, and personal banking / and browsing for information on goods and services is becoming important for off-line shopping. • “Use” divide is appearing now ICT access is widely available (educated, IT-using occupations, not necessarily age-related).
Some access divides persist Canada Nordic countries: Individuals with tertiary education accessing the Internet from home a quarter to one third higher than for primary educated (Nordic Council of Ministers, 2002). Gap even higher in other countries
Norway: catching up with broadbandBroadband subscribers per 100 Inhabitants. June 2004 provisional
Household usage Broadband diffusion and use of Internet. Canada 1997-2002 Percentage of all households • Most common activities: e-mail, information search. • Next: reading /downloading news, playing/downloading games and music, banking, window shoppingand buying goods and services. • Broadband Internet strongly affects type of use and intensity.
P2P: The only “successful” broadband application so far? OECD Information Technology Outlook 2004 based on BigChampagne.
Broadband infrastructure, applications and content. What role for policy ? “Broadband as utility: Striking the balance between content and infrastructure”
ICT policies in OECD countries Primary focus: • General ICT policy environment (visions, policy co-ordination). • ICT innovation (R&D support programmes and government projects). • Enhancing the infrastructure (broadband, electronic settlements, authentication and digital signatures, standards). Broadband has been a new focus, with growing policy interest in digital content (especially public sector content) and digital delivery. • Diffusion and use (ICT skills, government on line, diffusion). • Business environment (competition, IPRs). • Promoting trust (security of information systems and networks).
E-business and organisational capabilitiesChallenges and policy issues • Challenges:Integration of e-business into business strategies, integration with organisational, process and product innovations, investment in skills, develop metrics to assess impacts. • Policies:Widespread complex applications (e.g. SMEs), moving beyond basic connectivity and ICT readiness. • Digital content development and electronic distribution. • Regulatory and financial frameworks that enable online transactions (e.g. authentication, payments), foster trust/security. • Interoperability, standards and new forms of competition are new policy issues with global networked production.
Household access and useChallenges and policy issues • Supply-side measures to raise connectedness: • broadband private-sector rollout • e-government projects • digital signatures and trust measures • availability of government digital content. • Demand-side measures to enhance diffusion and encourage content provision, and education and social equity measures: • ICT literacy integrated into education • community access development or encouragement • disadvantaged socio-economic groups targeted • legal or financial measures to encourage ICT uptake.
OECD Broadband Recommendation 2004 • Competition / liberalisation in infrastructure, services and applications. • Technology neutral policy / reassessment of regulation. • Investment policies (supply and demand). • Private sector led - complementary government initiatives. • R&D encouragement. • Security / trust (privacy, consumer, cross-border). • Balanced regulatory frameworks - balance interests of suppliers and users. IPRs / digital rights management, encourage innovative e-business models.
OECD Work on Digital Broadband ContentBroadband content: What role for policy ? • High quality "always-on" broadband Internet services transforming industries and services that can provide digital content. • Stocktaking studies: • Business models for digital content and changing value chains • Drivers and barriers to growth, sector transformation and changing market structures, impacts on growth and employment. • Barriers are not mainly technological ones. 1.Mobile content 2. Scientific and technical publishing 3. Music 4. Online computer games 5. Public sector information
Issues for digital content development and delivery • Innovation and technology • R&D, innovation. Venture capital. Human resources. • Value chain and business models • Framework conditions. Convergence issues. Technology neutrality. Competition / co-ordination along value chains. Revenue sharing models. • Infrastructure • Broadband policies for coverage / access. Standards, interoperability (including DRM). (Micro-)payments, electronic signatures, authentication. • Business and regulatory environment • Adapting established regulatory frameworks IPRs, tax neutrality. • Public / government content (public sector information) • Government content availability. Digitising content. Education, health.