Title: IT Scenario of Nepal
1IT Scenario of Nepal
- Rajib Subba
- ltrajib_at_nepalit.comgt
2About myself
Dy. Chief, Communication Division, PHQ Naxal.
Secretary General, Computer Association of
Nepal. Paper IT HRD Polciy and Strategy Paper
for National Planning Commission, HMG,
2000. Publication Cyber Post. URL
WWW.NEPALIT.COM.
3Computer Association of Nepal (CAN)
- Established in 1992
- National level Confederation of IT professionals,
companies, other sectoral regional members,
users, students - Advising lobbying to the Government on key IT
issues - ActivitiesInfo-Tech, Seminars, TechTalks,
Awareness programs etc.
4Historical Perspective
- Start of Telecommunication 1914
- IBM 1401 for Population Census 1971
- Second Main Frame 1981
- National Computer Center (NCC) 1974
- Private Sectors involvement 1980s
- 1st FDI ltDSIgt 1983
5Historical Perspective
- Proliferation of IT companies 1990s
- Electrical/Electronics Engg Course 90s
- Establishment of CAN 1992
- Computer Engineering Course 1994
- Email Services 1994
- Internet Services 1995
6Historical Perspective
- Establishment of NTA 1997
- New Telecom Policy 1999
- Private VSAT Services 2000
- MoST IT Strengthening 2000
- IT Policy 2000
- IT Act in process
7Existing Status - Communications Infrastructure
- 1528 out of 3913 VDC have telephone service. By
2002, at least 2 lines/ VDC. - 50 demand of telephone services are met.
- Leased lines from PSTN, radio links and VSATs
constitutes data comm. Network. - 9 /12 ISPs with cumulative bandwidth of more than
10 Mbps. 4 Cities have POP services available. - Four private VSAT Network Providers.
8Existing Status - Human Resource Development
- Four Universities with annual intake of more than
1500 students in IT alone - 8000 students appear in SLC examination with
computer science - 200 schools offer computer courses
- 102 syllabus has also an optional computer
science course - Estimate of 1000 computer training institutes
(some affiliated from India, Singapore, UK)
9Existing Status - Domestic Computerization
- HMG
- Examination Processing
- School Information System
- Voters Registration Election Results
Information - Value Added Tax (VAT) Accounting System
- Criminal Record Information System
- Data Processing (Census, Surveys, Tourist
Embarkation/Disembarkation etc.) - Personnel Record System
- Financial Management System
- Land Information System etc
10Existing Status - Domestic Computerization
- Semi- Government
- Provident Fund
- Nepal Telecom (Billing, Customer Service, GL,
Cable Network Planning) - Nepal Electricity Authority (Billing, Personnel
Records, Simulations, MIS etc) - RNAC (Billing, Airlines Reservation etc.)
- Nepal Rastra Bank (Surveys, Offline Banking)
11Existing Status - Domestic Computerization
- Financial Sectors
- Banks
- State affiliated (NRB, RBB, ADB, NBL)
- JV Banks
- Finance Companies Cooperatives
- Insurance Companies
- Tourism Industry
- Hotel Management Systems
- Airlines Reservation System
- Industrial Business Enterprises
- Limited use in Accounting, Inventory, Sales
12Existing Status - Domestic Computerization
- Health
- Hospitals Nursing Homes ( Hospital Management
System)
- Educational Institutions
- Examination Processing (TU, 102,Private Schools)
- Student Registrations, Fee Accounting, Class
Scheduling in Private Schools
13Existing Status - Software Services Export
- In 1998, WB reported the possibility of annual
export of US 1 billion in 15 - 20 years. - IT Policy 2000 targets for RS 10 Billion by 2005
- Software and Service Joint-ventures with US and
Japan. - A number of export oriented SMEs for Software
development and Services such as Back-office data
entry, Map Digitization, Medical Transcription
Call Centers established - A number of web services for export purposes as
well are also operating
14Notable Accomplishments
- Sizable and successful software like Banking,
Healthcare and Airlines Systems have been
developed here - Development services have been provided to
reputed companies like Toshiba,Oracle - Mission critical projects like on-line medical
transcriptions, call centers being established - e-Commerce portals are developed here for US and
Europe - MM CD-ROM of Nepal has acclaimed International
BEST Award
15Information Technology Human Resource Development
16Nepals endeavor in developing human resource
- First computer in 1971. About 15 people got
trained. - Establishment of NCC (National Computer Centre)
in 1980. 2nd Main Frame computer. About 25 people
got opportunities for higher education and
training in foreign countries. - Apple PC was introduced. Training unit at NCC
around 1982. - Simultaneously Private sector followed.
- DSI ltData Systems Internationalgt in 1984, 1st
foreign investment in IT, trained some of its
staff in the US. - Technical education started in early 40s.
Technical courses in Electrical Engineering in
mid 60s. - B.E. in Electronics and Electrical Engineering
was started after 25 years by IOE ltInstitute of
Engineeringgt. - Kathmandu University, a private institution,
started Computer Engineering in mid 90s and IOE
(govt) in 1998/99. Bachelor level computer
education by private sector by early 90s.
17IT HRD Scenario
- IT Academic/Training
- 4 Universities, 1500 plus intake _at_ Bachelor level
- No Masters course ltMCA, M.Sc., M. E.gt
- Almost all foreign educated graduates
- Optional subject in few High Schools
- Compulsory subject in few private schools
- Number of Private Training Institutes is about
1000 - National, MNCs, and Franchisee
18IT HRD Scenario
- HR situation
- Higher Level - 1,000 Bachelor's and above
- Middle level - 3,000 Intermediate Computer
Application - Lower level - 10,000 from short term courses
- IT manpower produced so far
- Polytechnic 600
- Engineering 200
- National Computer Center 10,000 ltDTP/Diplomagt
- Private sector trained 50,000 plus
- Foreign educated Considerable number
19IT HRD Scenario
- Almost 65 of the software professionals employed
in the industry were in software development and
operations, 3 in domain expertise development,
13 in marketing and relationship development,
15 in client support and 4 in other activities.
- The number of software professionals employed
have increased by about 25. This includes
software professionals in non-commercial
organization as well as software development
units in user organization. - Skills in demand Business applications of
software development, E-Commerce, Java, OOPs,
Client-Server, Internet, Telecommunication/Network
ing, RDBMS, Project Management, quality
assurance, technical writing etc.
20Why IT HRD?Importance of IT for Nepal
- For Nepal, the IT sector may provide an
opportunity to overcome the geographical
disabilities. IT might enable Nepal to achieve
the goal of being a prosperous and self-reliant
nation. - Upside
-
- The potential of the IT industrys high capacity
to generate wealth, foreign exchange and
employment has already caught the imagination of
Nepals businessmen, citizens, economists,
bureaucracy, media and politicians. - Potential
- Over 18 Lakh lt18,000,000gt IT job opportunities
worldwide by the end of the year 2005. -
21Why IT HRD?Importance of IT for Nepal
-
- Job is the mantra all the time.
- Growing demand of IT professionals worldwide.
- Nepal gets advantage vis-Ã -vis Indian
counterparts. - Fastest Growing career opportunities world wide.
- E-Commerce/Internet has created new
opportunities. - Size doesn't matter for IT advantage.
- Rebranding
- Norths Technology - Souths Resources
22Constraints in HRD
- IT HRD Training Not recognized as SERVICE
INDUSTRY - Academic and non-academic IT Less opportunity
for IT higher studies. Lack of Proper Faculties
Limited Faculties with Masters Degree Sole
Doctorate Degree Faculty. Absence of TOT courses. - Computer literacy program Not compulsory till
now. - Brain Drain Reversing the brain drain is the
most important issue. May be countered by
producing large pool of IT professionals. - Financial constraints Tax, Venture capital, soft
loans. - Lack of one Window Policy
- IT Park Yet to take off
- Quality Control Curricula and effectiveness of
their programs are in a questionable form.
Problem of Monitoring of Curriculum.
23Constraints in HRD
- Promote Internet Lack of universal access to
Global Knowledge - Why promote Internet for education?
- for distance learning -student and teacher are
connected by technology rather than the classroom - promotes education and learning by reducing costs
and improving the effectiveness of content
delivery - improves effectiveness of distance learning
- provides the network for life-long learning
- allows individuals to participate in research
24National Vision
- Human capital in information age/ Knowledge based
society - Key Asset PEOPLE. For Nepal, Human resource is
the real asset because IT is the Knowledge
Industry. - Computer Education for all
- Universal access to information
- Center of Excellence
- Model Agency for Digital Age
25- The dream Center of Excellence
- IITs of India.
- UEC Tokyo, Japan
- AIT of Bangkok, Thailand
- For individuals and countries, education is the
key to creating, adapting and spreading
knowledge. - Quality human resource contributes to a countrys
ability to compete and trade in international
markets, and to innovate, development of skills,
continuous learning and sustainable employment.
26- The dream Center of Excellence
- Institute of Engineering ltIOEgt
- Established in 1972, Popularly know as IOE.
- Among the top 10 engineering colleges in Asia
according to AIT report. - Third best engineering school based on the
performance of AITs Masters level students in
2000. - Annual intake capacity in 1999/2000
- B.E.
- Electronics 48
- Computer 24
- Electrical 48
- Polytechnic
- Electronics 48
- Electrical 192
- Source IOE/TU, Profile-99/2000
27Center of Excellence
- School of Engineering/KU would be another
promising example. - KU established in 1992 by private sector.
- No of student currently enrolled ltundergradgt
- Computer Engineering 24
- Electronics and Electrical 24
- Source Annual Report of University Grant
Commission-98/99 - Other engineering colleges have yet to show their
performance in the market. - IT Training National Brand?CSE.
28IT Policy 2000
29IT Policy 2000
- Vision
- To place Nepal on the global map of information
technology within the next five years. - Objectives
- To make information technology accessible to the
general public and increase employment through
this means. - To build a knowledgebased society.
- To establish knowledgebased industries.
30IT Policy 2000 Key Strategies
- Private sector participation
- HMG only as Promoter, Facilitator Regulator
- Human resource development IT Education
- Domestic foreign investments promotion
- IT use in HMG, public, private sectors and rural
areas - Data communication infrastructure even to rural
areas - Promotion of IT industry of Nepal in the world
31IT Policy 2000 - Key Policies
- IT as Priority Sector
- One window policy NITC
- Facilitating private sector investments
- Development of rural Internet facilities and
facilitation of e-commerce, e-education, e-health
and technology transfers - Help IT Education Training
32IT Policy 2000 - Key Policies
- All HMGs operations computerization and
information dissemination through websites - IT Research Developments
- Venture capital fund
- Computer education from School
- Cyber Laws
33IT Policy 2000 Key Action PlansInfrastructure
Development
- Information Super Highway North-South Highways
the use of broadband information network - IT Park in Kavre by HMG other parks (private)
- 1 Custom duty for 5 years
- Establishments of Internet Nodes in all regions
by 2058/59 in all districts by 2060/61
34IT Policy 2000 - Key Action PlansIT
Proliferation
- E-Governance
- Computerization and connection to Internet in
HMG offices with 3 years plan - Web-sites of all offices up to district levels
within 1 year - Requirement of computers knowledge for all
Government new recruitment and promotion - Creation of Nepali script contents in Internet
- Information Technology Officer for each HMG
Offices - Possibilities for Point-to-Point Voice
communication
35IT Policy 2000 - Key Action PlansE-commerce
others
- Promote e-commerce
- Infrastructure development for Tele-medicine,
Distant Learning, Tele-Processing, E-commerce - Introduce implement IPR Laws
- Recognition of software services export
36IT Policy 2000 - Institutions
- Establishment of National IT Development Council
(NITDC) chaired by PM - National Information Technology Coordination
Committee chaired by Minister MOST for HRD - National Information Technology Center
- HMGs Computerization, content development, Data
Bank - Secretariat to NITDC, NITCC
- IT Standardization, Regulation
- IT Park Development Committee
37IT Policy 2000 - Key Action PlansHuman Resource
Development
- Help to University Level Computer Education
- Computer Education for all till 2010
- IT in Education
- Compulsory computer knowledge for new teachers
recruitment and distant computer education for
exiting teachers - 4 Hours free internet service to public
institutions by 2005. - Provision of Government scholarships for
high-level IT education
38HRD in IT Policy 2000
- Necessary facilities shall be supplied to the
universities in the country and graduate- and
postgraduate-level classes of international
standard in computer science and computer
engineering subjects shall be offered. - A long-term programme with a slogan computer
education to all by 2010 A.D. shall be
formulated and computer education shall be taught
as an optional subject in some public secondary
schools from the coming academic year and shall
be made a compulsory subject in phases. - IT shall be used to improve the quality of
education. - The private sector shall be encouraged to prepare
medium-level manpower required for the
information technology sector. Assistance shall
be provided to the private sector to set up
institutions for teaching, research, and
development of information technology in each
development region.
39HRD in IT Policy
- The knowledge of computer shall be made
compulsory to all newly-recruited teachers in
phases so as to introduce computer education in
schools and computer education shall also be
provided to all in-service teachers in phases
through distant education. - Emphasis shall be given to providing computer
education from the school level. Internet
facility shall be made available free of cost to
universities and public schools for four hours a
day within the next five years to provide
computer education in a systematic way. - His Majestys Government shall provide
scholarships to public and private sector
technicians for higher study in information
technology. - Necessary scholarships shall be given to poor and
deserving (diligent) students from remote areas
to pursue higher studies in information
technology.
40HRD in IT Policy
- Facilities
- One percent (1) customs duty shall be levied on
hardware, software and all kinds of computer
spare parts imported by training institutions
related to information technology, albeit on the
recommendation of the National Information
Technology Centre on the basis of services
rendered and the achievements of such
institutions. - As Nepali nationals working abroad can play an
important role in the technology transfer and
market promotion in this sector, they shall be
encouraged to invest their foreign currency
earnings in this sector. - As software development services based on
software are operated twenty-four hours, such
services shall be declared essential services to
guarantee regular production by employees working
in the companies related to such services, and
arrangements shall be made accordingly.
41IT HRD in IT Policy
- A National Information Technology Co-ordination
Committee shall be constituted to carry out
research on and develop information technology,
develop manpower required for this sector and a
curriculum for information technology, improve
the quality of computer training operated by the
private sector, ascertain the norms and monitor
these and co-ordinate such activities of
establishing relations with foreign educational
institutions.
42IT Policy 2000 - Facilities
- 1 custom duty for training institutes
- IT Services Industry as essential services
- Venture capital fund of Rs 10 Crore
- S/W as expenses H/W with 2 yrs Accl.
Depreciation - Additional .5 export tax for IT Fund
- Encouragement for NRNs investment in Nepal
43What next ?
- Implementation is the key to success
- Whatever good things specified in VI-IX plans
have never been implemented - HMG should implement all the action plan
specified in the policy with special ordinance,
if necessary - Establishment of the institutions, good plan
programs and budget to implement will be the key - MOST should be very selective in appointing
people to new institutions and there should be
special provisions for the remuneration. If
necessary, we should also be looking forward to
bring IT visionaries, Good Managers not only from
Nepal but abroad (NRNs, etc.)
44What is Missing?
- IT Policy 2000 has not implemented a lot of
things proposed by subcommittees preparing 6
position papers on IT in Nepal - Facilities provided is not competitive enough
with respect to other countries - Facilities extended to IT Park should also be
provided to Virtual IT Park - No action plans specified for Nepals promotion
to Global IT Scenario - NITC should implement HMGs computerization
effort through private sectors and not do the
work itself - Enactment of Cyber laws
45References
- Information Communication Infrastructure (Bhesh
R. Kanel Subash Bajracharya, 2000) - Human Resource Development (Prof Chabi R. Gajurel
Rajib Subba, 2000) - E-commerce in Nepal (Manohar Bhattarai, 2000)
- Software Production Application (Suresh Regmi,
2000) - IT Policy 2000
- Computerization Status of Nepal (ITPF)
- CIA- The World Factbook 2000-Nepal
- Statistical Pocket Book of Nepal (CBS, 1998)
46Thank you
ltemailrajib_at_nepalit.comgt