Title: Teleworking and Development Issues and Policy Considerations
1 Teleworking and Development Issues and Policy
Considerations
2TELEWORKING - working from a distance/away from
the main office with the support of information
and communication technologies (ICT)
- TELETRADE - REMOTE WORK ACROSS NATIONAL BORDERS
3Framework on Teleworking
4TELEWORKING - The future of WORK IN THE
INFORMATION SOCIETY. WHY?
- Increasing digitisation of information
- Part of the trend towards more flexible forms of
work - Part of the trend towards decentralisation and
outsourcing of work
5The future of WORK IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY.
(cont.)
- Provides choices for people in terms of where
they work (especially in information processing
jobs) - Potential for a better quality of life through
increased choice and autonomy over working lives
6Benefits of Teleworking to Developing Countries
(by overcoming barriers of time and space)
- Increase in productivity
- Increase in efficiency
- Increase in global competitiveness
- Create value-added employment opportunities
- Lead to sustainable development
- bring work to remote areas
- create jobs for disadvantaged e.g women, poor,
disabled - Lessen rural-urban migration
7WHAT JOBS CAN BE TELEWORKED?
- Management
- Sales and marketing
- Other IT specialisations (eg. Website managers)
- Graphic design
- Consultancy
- Writing and editing/journalism
- Translation
- Research
- Data entry and typing
- Secretarial work
- Telephone operators/counsellors
- Accounts
- Administration
- Desktop publishing
8Home-based Teleworking
- In Italy, Telecom staff at seven directory
enquiry service offices have been given the
opportunity to work from home, equipped by the
company with a computer, modem, fax machine and
telephone
9Telecentres/Mobile teleworkers
- In England in 1994, Digital Equipment closed down
its regional office in Newmarket, replacing it
with a very small telecentre for secretarial
staff only. The remaining 90 staff have become
flexible workers, working from home or whilst
on the move
10Call centres
- In Ireland, staff at a hotel reservation agency
in Cork take calls in seven European languages
from about sixteen countries. Callers dial
toll-free numbers in their own countries and
their calls are automatically routed to Ireland.
11Teletrade
- In the Philippines, data entry workers have been
inputting text and compiling the catalogue for
the new National Library in Paris. - In Barbados, staff (almost all women) handle
insurance claims from policy-holders with a
Canadian insurance company
12DIFFERENT TYPES OF CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIPS
- PART-TIME - CORE EMPLOYEES
- FULL-TIME - CORE EMPLOYEES
- FREE-LANCED
- INDEPENDENT SUB-CONTRACTOR
13- ISSUES AND POLICY CONSIDERATIONS.
14Socio-cultural
- General lack of awareness exposure to the
concept and meaning of teleworking and its
various forms - Skeptical and/or negative attitude to teleworking
by society generally - lack of trust of management
- lack discipline integrity and cannot be trusted
to be self-directed - view that Malaysians prefer face-to-face
interaction - lack of appreciation of family support esp. for
home-based telework
15Infrastructure
- Hardware - high costs of installation, high
investment costs in ICT equipment - Software - proprietary software for teleworking
systems is expensive other business software
is expensive - Services - relatively high cost of
telecommunications instability and unreliability
of telecommunication lines power supply - Access - uneven distribution of services,
telephone penetration rate of 5 per 100 in rural
areas
16Human resources
- Lack of IT skills for new entrants into the
labour force from secondary school, especially
from the rural areas - IT illiterate/deficient employees
- Many IT and other graduates do not possess the
skills set and knowledge base required by
industry - Lack of teleworking skills among managers and
teleworkers
17Regulatory Framework
- Contract terms of employment for different
categories of teleworkers lacking - Need for networking, support and protection of
teleworkers, including the self-employed - the site operation of teleworkers could pose
problems in terms of housing and zoning issues
eg. home-based, telecentres.
18Role of the State
- Need to prioritise sectors and occupations which
are amenable to teleworking - Disseminate information regarding opportunities
in telework and teletrade - Need to monitor and evaluate the progress of
teleworking and teletrade in the country and
elsewhere
19Role of the State (cont.)
- Ensure that rural and poor areas and marginalised
groups to benefit from teleworking as part of the
process of sustainable human development
20CONCLUSION
- STUDY POTENTIAL OF TELEWORKING
- STUDY BARRIERS
- AREAS OF INTERVENTION
- PILOT PROJECTS
- MONITORING
- DIALOGUE AMONG STATE, BUSINESS AND CIVIL SOCIETY