Title: Digital Divide
1Digital Divide
Public FTAA.ecom/inf/110 October 25,
2001 Original Spanish Translation FTAA
Secretariat
- DD Discussion Group and the Ecuadorian experience
- brecha-digital_at_yahoogroups.com
- www.corpece.net
2The discussion group
- Created from the FTAA CEEC.
- Over 120 participants throughout the world.
- Purpose To stimulate discussion grounded in the
theme of the Digital Divide, generate working
material, conclusions and recommendations to
address the DD.
3Expected Results
- Definition of the digital divide.
- Nature of the digital divide.
4Expected Results
- Different views of the Divide.
- Preliminary conclusions and recommendations.
5Definition
- The Digital Divide
- Substantive differences in the development, use,
application and exploitation of Information, and
Information and Communications Technology
6Definition
- 1 Actors and 0 Actors.
- The digital universe consists of 1s and 0s.
- 1s are information, 0s are absence of
information.
7THE DIGITAL DIVIDE
1 Threshold
1 Zone
0 Threshold
0 Zone
81,1 Countries
Capacity and Capability
Deficiencies and Weaknesses
Potential and Weaknesses
-1,0 Countries
1,0 Countries
Deficient and Difficult
-1,-1 Countries
9Characteristics
- It exists.
- It is not an isolated concept.. It is the outcome
of a complex set of social, economic, cultural,
educational and political conditions. - Several of its components are measurable (PCs per
no. of inhabitants, Internet access, technical
infrastructure, etc.)
10Characteristics
- It is tricky to overcome because it often
impinges on areas sensitive for 1 actors, such as
state-of-the-art technology and various
constraints of a legal, political or commercial
nature.
11Characteristics
- It relates not only to the capacity to produce
ICT goods and services, but also to the capacity
to apply and benefit from them, and to be
self-sufficient in ICT. It is not a question of
technology.
12Characteristics
- It is not limited to the poorest countries. It
also exists among minorities in the rich
countries. The difference lies in the
availability of means to address it, and the
degree of impact of the divide on overall
development. These are the factors that
differentiate 1 countries sharply from 0
countries.
13Characteristics
- In the digital world imbalances increase more
quickly over time, and every day they become
harder to remedy.
14Effects
- It has a determining influence on international
relations among countries and regions. It
creates further imbalances in international trade
negotiations.
15Effects
- In processes like the FTAA
- It puts 1 countries at an advantage.
- It puts 0 countries at a disadvantage.
16Effects
- It impinges on several areas, such as the social,
commercial and educational spheres. - It engenders a continuous and escalating
imbalance in levels of access to and use of
information. It is not a static condition, but
grows exponentially in internet time.
17Effects
- It governs the level of development and
adaptation of countries to aspects of the new
economy. - It creates and intensifies vicious circles, such
as No investment in RD for lack of resources,
which in turn makes resources more scarce...
18Effects
- It acts to potentiate already existing
differences in levels of development.
19Conclusions
- 1 countries are characterised by
- The divide exists in them.
- They possess all the resources necessary to
address it. - They can control the impact of the digital divide
on their overall development.
20Conclusions
- It cannot be addressed exclusively from the
technological point of view, nor is it related to
technology. It will have a determining influence
on all aspects of trade negotiations and
international relations.
21Conclusions
- It is clear that the future will be determined by
technology and the ability to use it and benefit
from it. Biotechnology and Privacy and Security
are the main challenges of the immediate
future.We must be prepared to manage them
adequately or risk losing the chance of profit
for ALL in processes of negotiation.
22Recommendations.
- The key points are
- It is not enough to build bridges across the
digital divide. This does not eliminate or
narrow it. It is only a means of avoiding it in
specific places.
23Recommendations.
- The key points are
- Genuine transfer of technology and support for
education must be the priorities if we are to
overcome the divide.
24Recommendations.
- The key points are
- It calls for concerted actions international
community, government, universities, business,
civil society.
25Recommendations.
- Start with what is possible
- Develop practical measures to identify common and
individual characteristics of the divide.
26Recommendations.
- Give effect to statements such as
- FROM DIGITAL DIVIDE TO DIGITAL OPPORTUNITYA
GLOBAL CALL TO ACTION. July 22, 2000. Pres. Bill
Clinton USA.
27Recommendations.
- Give effect to statements such as
- "The challenge before us is to enable the
currently excluded 4 billion of the world's
population to participate in and benefit from the
information revolution," states the report. It
notes that harnessing the potential of ICT for
development, the reduction of poverty and the
empowerment of those who are currently
marginalized is a "monumental" challenge. "At the
same time, it is an extraordinary opportunity to
make a tangible difference in the lives of the
vast majority of people on the planet. - A high-level panel led by the former President of
Costa Rica that issued a strategy for the
proposed United Nations Task Force on Information
and Communications Technology (ICT) which aims to
bridge the "digital divide. February 2001.
28Recommendations.
- Motivate countries to develop processes (in
keeping with their needs, resources, priorities,
etc.) of - E-procurement. (Public purchasing by electronic
means). - E-Government.(Provision of a variety of services
by electronic means). - Development of connectivity agendas.
- Human development with ICT support.
- Strengthening institutions that can contribute to
reduction or elimination of the divide, such as
employers organisations, universities, NGOs,
etc. - Support for processes of genuine transfer of
technology. - Investment in RD.
29Recommendations.
- Solutions cannot come from outside. They must be
indigenous. To fail to seek solutions is to
maintain the divide. The dozens of extraneous
solutions that have been proposed in this area,
as in many others, are useless.
30Recommendations.
- Spread the word. Let countries know what each of
the actors is doing. Motivate the actors (WITSA) - Pool resources. There are initiatives like
Comunidad Eñe.. - Support consumer and business participation in
areas such as electronic commerce by providing an
appropriate legal framework.
31Recommendations.
- Solutions are not market solutions
- FREE PEOPLE. FREE MARKET.
- Donald L. Evans. U.S. Secretary of Commerce.
- Before the Latin American/Caribbean.
- E-Commerce Summit April 4, 2001 Buenos Aires, Ar
http//www.mac.doc.gov/nafta/sp-apr5231.htm
32Recommendations.
- MAKE COOPERATION PRACTICAL.
- WE ARE NOT EXPERTS IN WRITING APPLICATIONS.
- PLANNED ICT EVENT IN 1 YEAR NAMES OF
PARTICIPANTS REQUESTED...
33The Ecuador experience
TALK TRAIN TOOLS TIME TIMING TRANSFER OF
TECHNOLOGY
34The Ecuador experience
TALK To all levels. To government,
universities, business, etc. TRAIN Stimulate
potential. Education and specialised training.
MICIP-World Bank TOOLS Proyecto PKI
CORPECE-NNUU. CONATEL Multi-purpose telecentres ,
Connectivity Agenda, Universal Access, Flat
Charge, FODETEL. ESPOL Technology Park, Internet
education Edufuturo.com, maestr_at_s.com,
CONTRALORIA Start talking about e-procurement.
Legislation. PKI Banco Central.
35The Ecuador experience
TIME We have already started work on this. It
cant be put off till tomorrow. CORPECE since
1998. TIMING In synch. International Community,
State, Business, Universities, Civil
Society. TRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGY Every project
implemented must develop machinery for transfer
of technology and facilitate RD investment.
36GET INVOLVED.
- Brecha-digital_at_yahoogroups.com
- www.corpece.net
- Put a link to the discussion group on your
website.