Title: Natasha Beschorner
1ICT Applications for Rural DevelopmentExamples,
Enablers, Success Factors
- Natasha Beschorner
- June 5, 2007
2Outline
- How can ICT contribute to rural economic
development? - Examples, Cases
- Critical Success Factors and enabling environment
- Key questions roles of government, development
partners
3How can ICT contribute to rural economic
development?
- Provides access to information benefiting rural
producers and supply chains - e.g. Market price information, weather, supply
chain information (e.g. transport and fuel
availability), news, - Facilitates access to services
- Financial services, access to credit, funds
transfer, savings - Land registration, land use planning/administratio
n - Facilitates access to markets
- E-commerce-direct to customer
- E-commerce-portals, virtual communities
- Facilitates access to other public services for
rural populations (health, education, government)
4ICT Tools
- Mobile phone (voice, text/SMS)
- Internet via PC
- Internet via mobile phone/PDA
- Broadcast media (now via TV, radio in
medium-term via mobile phone and Internet as a
result of convergence)
5M-Banking
- Transfer of credit (airtime) via mobile phone/SMS
- Deposits, savings, loans, payroll, remittance
payments, purchases (in participating retail
outles), bill payments - Partnership between mobile operator, financial
institution financial regulator
6M-Banking Examples 1
- G-cash, SmartMoney Globe, Smart (Philippines)
- Wizzit-MTN (S. Africa)
- Celpay (Zambia)
- Safaricom M-Pesa (Kenya)
- NTT DoCoMo (Japan)
7M-Banking potential benefits
- To consumers
- Reduces travel time and costs (to travel to Bank
branch). In Papua New Guinea, teachers may travel
2-3 days by rough road or boat to withdraw
salaries - Reduced transaction costs for remittances (1
cash-out for G-cash, compared to higher rates
from Western Union) - Reduced opportunities for fraud, counterfeit and
theft by providing a secure electronic mode for
transferring funds (as opposed to, for example,
travelling long distances to transfer cash) - To service providers
- Reduced direct costs for delivering savings and
credit products - Reduced errors and increased transparency in the
transfer and recording of loan disbursements and
payments and savings deposits - Easier record keeping on each client through
computerization of transactions through mobile
phones, thus making it easier for financial
institutions to tailor products and services for
segments within their large pool of small
customers.
8M-Banking Key Enablers
- Telecom infrastructure (mobile) reliable,
affordable, extensive penetration in rural areas,
and good network quality - Linked to overall telecoms market environment
(competition, effective regulation) - Technology bandwidth, security issues
- Literacy (SMS culture)
- Financial sector regulation consumer protection,
risk management, anti money-laundering
9Market Price Information
- Formal or informal transmission of price and
other information between markets and producers - Production and dissemination of market
intelligence - Can be top-down (govt, private sector) or
bottom-up (private sector, individual) - Reduces price instability and intermediation
costs for producers - Expands market opportunities
10ExamplesMarket Information 1
- Manobi (Senegal, Uganda, S. Africa). Producer
price information via SMS. Recently also
emergency rescue capability (using GPS).
11Examples Market Information-2
- Sri Lanka Govi Gnana (Farmer Knowledge)-developed
by govt - Philippines B2B Price Now (Internet)
- Ghana TradeNet (Internet)
- Warana (India)
- Senegal Manobi (mobile phone, PDA)
- Bangladesh Grameen Village Phone (mobile)
- India eChoupal (Internet)
- India Kerala fishermen (mobile phone)
12Examplesonline extension service
13Market Price Information Key Enablers
- Affordable, reliable telecoms infrastructure
- Mobile telephony
- Internet (via PC or mobile/GPRS, 3G)
- Content management information quality,
relevance, timely updates - HR capacity to deliver services
14Examples Land Information Systems
- Cadastral information
- Land use planning, GIS
- Environmental management
- Tax collection
- Disaster management
- Property registration
15Examples Land Information Systems
- India Bhoomi land records computerization
- Guatemala land administration
- Panama digital registry
- India, Gyandoot
- Thailand computerised land regisation
- Vietnam Bac Ninh LIS
- Philippines LAMP, LARES
16Land Information Key Enablers
- Infrastructure affordable, reliable, access to
Internet - Rural broadband
- Institutional and legal reforms -business
process change, incentives - Institutional coordination (registration, land
valuation, mapping, taxation)
17Key Questions
- How well connected are rural populations, and
what policy changes are needed to improve rural
connectivity? - How can high-value information applications be
mobilized and scaled-up to improve rural
productivity, livelihoods and living standards ? - How much capacity building is required for rural
areas to create a society of producers of local
knowledge and of users of that knowledge? - How can government efforts to promote rural
development in various forms and to develop
rural infrastructure be more closely integrated,
conceptually, institutionally and in practice?
18Rural ICT Applications CSFs
- Low-cost, reliable communications infrastructure,
available in rural areas - Mobile phone networks
- Broadband
- Private investment
- Supportive and effective legal/regulatory
framework - Competitive telecoms markets
- Effective regulation consumer protection,
tariffs, spectrum, interconnection - Universal Service/Access policies (stimulating
rural access) - ICT skills
- information systems management, content
development, training at village level (users,
operators) - Broader institutional development
19Telecoms Infrastructure Trends
- Rapidly increasing access to mobile, particularly
in urban areas, but increasingly in rural as
urban markets saturate - Lower costs of coverage
- New technologies and convergence (mobile
Internet, GPRS, 3G, IPTV) - Next wave rural broadband (investment in
fibre-optic backbones)
20Access to Telecommunications
21(No Transcript)
22Telecoms access in the Pacific( of population)
23The Access Problem
24Addressing the supply gap
- Policies and programs to facilitate access to
telecommunications in rural areas - e.g. universal service policies
- Universal service funds
- Broadband
- PPPs for investment
- PPPs for service provision
25Extending Access to Rural Areas
- Need for increased, mainly private, investment in
communications infrastructure and services - Market liberalization phase out monopolies and
introduce competition, especially in mobile,
Internet - Effective and transparent regulation, in
particular greater balance between capacity of
operators (high) and governments (low) - Fair prices
- Competitive behaviour
- Good governance
- Rural access ensuring service to commercially
unviable areas (many of these) - Reducing costs of international bandwidth
(regional infrastructure-sharing? Satellite vs
cable?)
26ICT Skills Issues
- ICT-skills needs
- Curriculum relevance
- Academic-industry partnerships
- User skills
- Content development
- Maintenance
- Daily use
27M-Banking Role of Govt
- Stimulate greater competition in both
telecommunications and banking services. - Stimulate greater participation from private
capital. - Support an expansion in rural telephony through
smart subsidies to help private entrepreneurs
develop rural infrastructure. - Develop a suitable financial regulatory framework
for m-banking services. - Central Bank authorities need to develop a
framework that protects consumers from undue
risks, fraud or crime and ensures that service
providers adopt adequate risk management
measures while at the same time facilitates and
encourages innovation in financial service
development, in particular to better serve rural
communities.
28M-Banking Role of Development Partners
- Equity investment (IFC)
- Encourage involvement of local operators and
commercial banks in the development of their own
m-banking service platforms - Advise financial regulators on regulatory
requirements - TA, training, workshops and seed financing and
sponsorship of partnerships between
telecommunications operators, rural banks and
central bank officials, can help extend the
mobile financial services frontier to rural areas
29Market Info Services-role of govt
- Promoting low cost access to mobile phones appear
to be the best way to empower farmers with the
ability to gather market price information from
trusted sources that are relevant to their
particular needs and to reduce intermediation
costs and price variability. - There is a role for both Government and donors in
helping to develop rural telephony, as well as
increasing Internet connectivity to expand farmer
access to opportunities to establish new contacts
through email and search for market intelligence
information in the Web.
30Market Info Services role of devel. partners
- Integrating infrastructure and applications
development support.e.g. Guatemala Rural
Economic Development Program (World Bank 2006)
supports telecommunications development (50 of
total funding), together with agricultural
marketing and trade (25), general transportation
(25) and general agriculture, fishing and
forestry (5). - Indonesias Farmers empowerment through
agricultural technology and information project
is an example that combines support to the
countrys extension service with the delivery,
via the Internet and mobile phones, of market
intelligence and technical services, and is
expected to foster greater interaction between
extension agents, researchers, farmers and
traders.
31Land role of govt and development partners
- A long term program made up of adaptable program
loans as in Thailand, Lao P.D.R., the
Philippines, Honduras and El Salvador - could
help expand land administration services and
gradually develop land information systems. - Avoid focusing too much on sophisticated portals
that provide online land administration services.
Many such portals have been set up only after a
long institutional development struggle, the
reengineering of procedures and significant
legislative changes. - To increase understanding among decision-makers
and project planners, studies, workshops and
exchanges of staff on land information systems
approaches, specialized land information systems
topics and Internet service requirements could be
very productive.
32Multiple responses at different levels
Access Devices
Vendors retailers
User Domain
Telecenters, Micro-finance schemes, e.g. Grameen
Content, Services, Applications, Customer Care
Service Content providers
Demand aggregation, e-government programs,
e-gov outsourcing
Operator Service Provider Domains
Access Networks Last Mile
Retail operators
Universal Service Funds and Output-Based Aid
Carriers carrier
Broadband Backbone Networks
PPPs and Open Access Model, e.g. Andra Pradesh
Passive Infrastructure Providers (e.g. Wireless
Tower Companies)
Passive Infrastructure Provider Domain
Ducts, Masts, Poles, Co-location Sites, Dark
Fibre
Open Access and OBA being explored
33Further Issues for Discussion
- Roles of public, private sectors, development
partners - More holistic view of rural ICT
infrastructure, HR, value-added applications.