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The Digital Divide: Development Issues for Rural Areas

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Wire centers with POPs. 11.0. 86. 784. Wire centers with packet gateway switches. 12.4 ... Wire centers with digital switches % Rural. Rural Total. US Total ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Digital Divide: Development Issues for Rural Areas


1
The Digital DivideDevelopment Issuesfor Rural
Areas
  • Edward J. Malecki
  • The Ohio State University
  • Prepared for the conference, E-COMMERCE
    Impacting the Way We Do Business, Nashville, TN,
    October 1-2, 2001

2
The Digital Economy
  • The digital economy is related to several of the
    major challenges facing rural America
  • Tapping digital technology
  • Encouraging entrepreneurs
  • Improving human capital

3
Technological Changes Signs of Promise
  • Flexible manufacturing and smaller plants and
    firms provide possibilities for rural firms
    against giant competitors
  • Telecommunications technologies and the Internet
    erase the tyranny of space and distance (the
    rural penalty)
  • Continuing population growth promises a needed
    upgrade of skills for the new economy

4
Rural Prosperity Is Not Assured
  • The most recent technology will be replaced by
    newer ones in urban areas
  • Deregulation, in favor of the market, has
    diminished the likelihood of universal service
  • The apparent ease of reaching distant markets via
    the Internet can cause business owners to neglect
    long-established rules of sound business practice

5
Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for Rural
Development
  • Necessary conditions
  • Basic physical infrastructure
  • Human resources with minimal training
  • Sufficient conditions (intangibles)
  • Ability of firms to innovate
  • Quality of management
  • Business culture supportive of entrepreneurs
  • Inter-firm and public-private cooperation
  • Finance for innovation and new economic activity
  • Source Landabaso (2000)

6
Rural America is Digital Source NTIA (2000),
Figure I-3
7
What we do on the Internet
Source E. Duncan (2000) Thrills and Spills A
Survey of E-Entertainment, The Economist, October
7.
8
Internet Supply and Demand
  • Internet service providers (ISPs) are found
    almost everywhere
  • Access is helped by extended Area Service or
    Extended Local Calling in states that permit it
  • The debate over universal service has shifted
    from supply to demand Shane Greenstein
  • Access is available but at an additional cost
    Sharon Strover
  • Rural citizens often lack the skills or
    knowledge to assure digital infrastructure in
    their areas Sharon Strover

9
Lone Eagles and High Fliers
  • Not all and maybe very few communities have
    attracted freelance teleworkers
  • Rural areas can and must attract migrants
    relocating for quality-of-life reasons
  • New residents bring knowledge, experience, and
    market contacts

10
Supply of Digital Infrastructure
  • Telecommunications has changed from being a
    homogeneous public utility to a highly variable
    factor of production for businesses
  • 20 years ago absent from all lists of business
    location factors
  • By the late 1990s in the top 3, often 1

11
What is Digital? Little Agreement
  • Technology has exploded the options available
  • Deregulation has permitted competition
  • There is no publicly available database of
    present infrastructure nationwide, or in many
    communities
  • Firms do not have to disclose their technology,
    nor the locations where it is implemented (trade
    secrets)

12
Rural America Digital, but not Broadband
Source NTIA (2000), Figure I-16
13
Universal Service What Is It? What Should It Be?
  • Internet access
  • Personal computer?
  • Personal digital assistant?
  • Wireless telephone?
  • Not just access devices, but applications and
    services
  • Not the same ones for everyone
  • Only schools, hospitals, and libraries should,
    generally, have access FCC

14
The Status of Rural Telecommunications
Infrastructure
  • Points of presence (POPs) are needed for access
    to Internet backbone networks
  • Digital switches are needed for direct transfer
    of data
  • Both are found in rural communities, and some
    places have urban-level infrastructure

15
Points of Presence of 4 Major Telecom Firms, 2000
16
Rural Locations with 3 or More POPs
  • Helena MT
  • Harrisonburg VA
  • Winchester VA
  • Bluefield WV
  • Clarksburg WV
  • Mason City IA
  • Couer dAlene ID
  • Carbondale IL
  • Galesburg IL
  • Quincy IL
  • Columbus IN
  • Richmond IN
  • Junction City KS
  • Madisonville KY
  • Jefferson City MO
  • Rolla Mo
  • Grand Island NE
  • Chambersburg PA
  • Staunton VA
  • Wytheville VA

17
Rural Locations of Digital Infrastructure and
POPs, 2000
18
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19
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20
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21
States with 10 or More Rural Locations Served by
Digital Switches
  • Tennessee 61
  • Ohio 50
  • Michigan 34
  • Wisconsin 21
  • Virginia 17
  • Pennsylvania 15
  • Oklahoma 13
  • Texas 11
  • Kentucky 10

22
14 States with Rural Locations Not Served by
Digital Switches, 2000
  • Arizona
  • Colorado
  • Georgia
  • Iowa
  • Idaho
  • Minnesota
  • Montana
  • North Dakota
  • New Mexico
  • Nevada
  • South Dakota
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • Wyoming

23
Rural Digital Infrastructure Is Very Uneven
  • Telecommunications providers differ
  • State regulatory agencies differ
  • State capitals and college towns tend to be
    better served than other rural communities

24
Is Wireless the Answer?
  • Not yet
  • And thats all we know

25
Rural Demand for a Digital Economy
  • Demonstrating effective demand in rural areas
  • Infrastructure investment
  • Appropriate services and applications
  • Awareness of users
  • Adoption and effective use
  • Creating competitive advantage

26
A Rural Success StoryLaGrange, Georgia
  • 60 miles southwest of Atlanta
  • City-owned fiber-optic network
  • 40 large commercial, institutional, and
    industrial customers
  • Large companies said they needed digital
    switching and a POP
  • LaGrange now has POPs of 5 interexchange carriers
  • Most other rural success stories have
    municipally-owned utilities

27
Lessons from LaGrange and Elsewhere
  • Systematic strategic planning
  • Learn local telecommunications inventory
  • Talk to local firms, large and small, to learn
    their needs
  • Aggregate demand
  • Especially of users with leased lines
  • Public-private partnerships
  • Federal, state and local governments should not
    be on a separate network, but should be part of
    local demand

28
Doing Business Digitally
  • The issues
  • Entrepreneurs and human capital
  • Migration can enhance both
  • Return migrants (former residents)
  • Tourists and others shopping for amenities
  • Migration and retirement are not one-shot events
  • Jobs follow people
  • Skilled and experienced new residents are digital
  • Niche manufacturing and global markets

29
Economically Viable Communities
  • Support for those starting new businesses
  • Community strategic economic development plan
  • Show openness to new ideas
  • Newcomers bring contacts and links to distant
    markets
  • Public-private collaborations are a critical part
    of the supportive structures that adapt and
    change for rural development

30
Digital Business
  • All firms need a Web site
  • Without one, many young people will believe the
    firm does not exist
  • All firms need more than a Web site
  • Real people
  • Consumer choice
  • Customized products, information, and services

31
No Magic Bullet
  • Telecommunications technology is not the magic
    bullet for rural development
  • More fruitful
  • to build and the enhance capabilities of local
    firms
  • To attract a share of experienced migrants
  • Rural communities need skilled people, both
    through local training and education and from
    in-migrants
  • Networks of businesses will boost rural demand,
    increase knowledge, and reduce isolation
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