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The Global Perspective: Integrating Nigeria into the Digital Economy

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communications technology creates global competition; rapid change is a constant. ... The new digital divide is about quality, not just quantity. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Global Perspective: Integrating Nigeria into the Digital Economy


1
The Global Perspective Integrating Nigeria
intothe Digital Economy
  • Professor Raymond Akwule
  • George Mason University
  • Fairfax, Virginia, USA
  • Nigerian Telecom Summit
  • Accelerating Access to Telecoms
  • Nigerian Communications Commission
  • May 2002

2
Eras of Economic Development The World of
Telecommunications
  • Pre-Industrial
  • Hunting
  • Agricultural
  • Industrial
  • Concerned mainly with production of Material
    goods mainly food and energy
  • Post-industrial
  • Information Society
  • Networked or Digital Economy
  • Concerned mainly with information productivity

3
The Nature of the Digital Economy
  • Private Sector Dominated
  • In 2002, more than half the countries in the
    world have fully or partially privatized their
    incumbent telecommunication operator.
  • Even in countries that have not yet done so, the
    private sector accounts for an ever greater share
    of the market.
  • Liberalized and Competitive
  • A majority of countries still retain monopolies
    in fixed-line services, such as local and long
    distance calls.
  • However, an overwhelming majority of countries
    now allows competition in the mobile and Internet
    market segments, which increasingly substitute
    for fixed-line voice
  • In countries that do not legally allow multiple
    service operators for international calling, an
    indirect level of competition exists through
    call-back, calling cards, cellular roaming and
    voice over the Internet Protocol (VoIP).

4
The Nature of the Digital Economy
  • Mobile
  • Telecommunication services are increasingly
    mobile, that is, delivered by the medium of radio
    waves rather than over a fixed-line network.
  • In the future, the majority of international
    calls may be made from, and delivered to,
    handheld devices. Those same devices will receive
    updates from websites and real-time video streams
    from multiple sources around the globe.
  • Radio is now being increasingly used to provide
    access networks, while wired networks provide the
    long-distance component.
  • By the end of 2001, twenty-eight African
    nationsor over half the regions countrieshad
    more mobile than fixed subscribers a higher
    percentage than any other continent.
  • Nigeria is expected to soon join this growing
    number of African countries with more mobile than
    fixed subscribers

5
The Nature of the Digital Economy
  • Global
  • Globalization has affected the telecommunication
    sector in three ways.
  • Global operations. Many major telecommunication
    operators have holdings in operators in other
    nations. It is increasingly rare to find a
    country that does not have a strategic foreign
    investor.
  • Regional and multilateral agreements. Governments
    have increasingly chosen to enshrine their market
    liberalizing moves in treaty-level commitments,
    notably in the context of the WTOs basic
    telecommunications agreement.
  • Global services. These include mobile cellular
    roaming, global satellite systems, calling cards
    and others that allow customers to continue to
    use a service while away from their home country.
    Future third-generation (3G) mobile services have
    been designed from the start to be global, rather
    than national, in scope.

6
Old economy and new economy networks Whats
the difference?
  • Old economy network
  • Hybrid analogue/digital
  • Circuit-switched
  • Highly regulated
  • Priced per minute
  • Distance-sensitive pricing
  • Generally state-owned and operated
  • Accounting rate system means cash flows from net
    traffic generating to net traffic receiving
    countries
  • Digital economynetwork
  • All digital
  • IP (packet-switched)
  • Largely unregulated
  • Priced per megabyte
  • Distance-insensitive pricing
  • Generally privately-owned and operated
  • Peering and transit system means cash flows from
    net traffic receiving to net traffic generating
    countries

7
Characteristics of the Digital Economy
  • In the new networked economy
  • There is greater flexibility in the way
    information is produced, transported and
    consumed, as more information is transported over
    greater distances in shorter time and with more
    efficiency.
  • The investment capital is knowledge and the means
    of production is the human intellect.
  • Increasingly, people work with their brains
    instead of their hands
  • Increasingly, innovation is more important than
    mass production
  • investment buys new concepts or the means to
    create them, rather than new machines
  • communications technology creates global
    competition
  • rapid change is a constant.

8
Characteristics of the Digital Economy
  • The Digital Economy also exacerbates already
    existing information gap the digital divide
  • Though connectivity and access have generally
    improved worldwide, there is still a huge and
    growing digital divide between and within regions
    as well as within countries
  • For instance, international Internet bandwidth
    (or IP connectivity) is a good measure of users
    experience with the Internet. The greater the
    bandwidth, the quicker the response times. The
    400000 citizens of Luxembourg between them share
    more international Internet bandwidth than
    Africas 760 million citizens. Thus, even though
    Africa has some five million Internet users, many
    of them may be restricted to using just e-mail
    and may not be able to browse the World Wide Web.
    The reality is that highspeed Internet access,
    which has become fashionable in many parts of the
    developed world, such as the Republic of Korea
    and North America, is still a long way off in
    most developing countries. The new digital divide
    is about quality, not just quantity.

9
Characteristics of the Digital Economy
  • The widening digital divide is caused by barriers
    to adoption of innovation such as lack of
    education, inadequate training, poverty, language
    barriers, etc

10
Some features of the new economy network
  • gt95 per cent of global IP capacity passes through
    United States
  • 96 out of top 100 websites in the United States
  • Developing countries wanting to hook up to US IP
    backbone must pay both half-circuits of the
    leased line
  • Smaller ISPs must pay bigger ones for transit
  • Accelerating returns to scale
  • high volume routes have lowest unit costs
  • big hubs get bigger
  • resources go to the strong

11
Integrating Nigeria into the New Digital Economy
A Way Forward
  • Connectivity and Access
  • Information Infrastructure the link to the global
    knowledge economy
  • Policy Focus
  • Continued Liberalization of the Nigerian ICT
    sector is an enabling force for sector growth
  • Regulatory Reform
  • Managing convergence supercedes
    telecommunications policy
  • N.I.I.S. (National Information Infrastructure
    Society)
  • A coordinated Economic growth requires efficient
    ICT sector and enabling environment

12
Integrating Nigeria into the New Digital Economy
A Way Forward
  • A coordinated Economic growth requires efficient
    ICT sector and enabling environment including the
    following
  • ICT Education and Training
  • Basic Skills - Basic education, vocational
    training, entrepreneurship
  • Content - Local value, languages
  • Applications (e-commerce, telemedicine,
    e-governance etc)

13
Integrating Nigeria into the New Digital Economy
A Way Forward
  • THANK YOU
  • Professor Raymond Akwule
  • Professor of Telecommunications and
  • Director, Center for Media Research and
    Telecommunications,
  • George Mason University,
  • Fairfax Virginia USA.
  • Rakwule_at_gmu.edu
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