ICT Implications for the Caribbean Region
Mapping the Research Agenda & the FP7/ICT Awareness Workshop University of the West Indies Mona Visitors Lodge Evan Duggan
March 18, 2009
Watershed Events in the History of ICT
Dr John Atanasoff and Clifford Berry designed and built first computer (ABC) Dr John Von Neumanns paper on the stored program concept Dr Grace Hoppers the education of a computer Marcian Edward "Ted" Hoff, Jr. proposed the microprocessor Further Developments   
Convergence of computing and communications technologies Digitization Communications protocols Miniaturization
ARPANET, NSFNET, and the beginning of the Internet Tim Berners-Lee invents medium for document sharing called WWW The rest is (really) history
  
Cascade of ICT-enabled Innovations Dramatic Increases in Price-Performance Ratio Ubiquity
The Digital Economy
Implications of The Digital Economy
E-Commerce/E-Government/M-Commerce 
Simplified product/service selection Markets become more competitive Customers are more discriminating (new expectations, more info, more choices)
 Creating opportunities for market efficiencies
Companies are evolving their business models with customers, intermediaries and suppliers
 
(no middleman)  Facilitating a global market (breaking down barriers)
Increased globalization Increased Competition
Electronic relationships and Real-time exchange (e-commerce) Shared processes (e-supply chain, extended-integrated enterprise)
Digital Convergence
ICT and Competitiveness in Small Economies
The Digital Divide* 
External Divide Internal Divide
Regional Response
Fixation on Digital Readiness Measures
 Digital Readiness Indices (E-readiness ranking, Networked Readiness Index, Digital Opportunity Index, ICT Diffusion Index, and E-government readiness ranking)
ICT Infrastructural Expansion
Is Readiness a surrogate for Effectiveness?
Other Innovations in the Digital Economy
Business Intelligence Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Knowledge Management Intelligent Systems Disintermediation Telecommuting Trans-national Business Model
Free and Open Source Software
"The future is here, it's just not widely distributed yet
William Gibson
Better Target for Small Economies Generally
Digital Maturity (Effectiveness) Continuum
 1. Awareness, 2. Access, 3 Adoption, 4. Exploitation, 5. Innovation
Specifically
Alter ICT Producer/Consumer Ratio
 Build Vibrant ICT Industry  Participate in the Global Software market
Potential benefits of ICT for people in developing countries
Economic  
Social
    
Economic Growth Sustainable resource management Job creation e-Inclusion e-Education & Literacy e-Health Poverty reduction Grassroots valorization Capacity Building & Good governance Reduction of unnecessary bureaucracy Transparency
Political
  
Creativity enhancement 
Way Forward to Bridge the External Divide 
Develop a digital effectiveness index (DEI)  Assess Digital effectiveness as baseline for targeted action
 Introspection so as to determine effective digital aims  Meaningful comparison across countries
 Develop core set of indicators - capabilities
Provide framework for linking capabilities to associated benefits along awareness to innovation continuum Develop Human capital Research factors that influence the development of a viable, sustainable ICT industry Identify competencies required for software development  local consumption  participation in the software export market Environmental Scanning Implement appropriate IT governance national level
regulatory and legislative framework for e-commerce and e-payment  national and regional levels
Way Forward to Bridge the Internal Divide 
e-inclusiveness, education, social mobility
Enable risk segments of Caribbean peoples to access and utilize information and knowledge through ICT for value creation Risk segments of society
Senior citizens Disabilities group SMEs Rural, underserved communities and schools  Urban poor  Youths  Women