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Assessing the networked readiness of the Gulf Cooperation Council’s Countries in an international perspective Lessons from the Global Information Technology Report 2008-2009 Dr. Irene Mia, Senior Economist and Director Global Competitiveness Network World Economic Forum E-Gulf Conference Muscat, December 21st-23rd, 2009 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Outline The World Economic Forum and the Global Competitiveness Network. The Global Information Technology Report series and the Networked Readiness Index (NRI). GCC countries’ networked performance, as assessed by the NRI 2008-2009, and relevant comparisons. The most dynamic countries/regions over time in the NRI time-series. 2 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries The Global Competitiveness Network Flagship product: The Global Competitiveness Report: launched in 1979 covering 16 countries; it has since expanded its coverage to 133 countries. Editor: Professor Klaus Schwab. Goal: to provide a benchmarking tool for policymakers and business leaders. 3 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries The Global Competitiveness Network Geographical coverage 4 The Global Competitiveness Network Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Thematic coverage Regional, topical and industry report series: The Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report The Global Information Technology Report The Global Enabling Trade Report The Lisbon Review The Mexico Competitiveness Report 2009 The Brazil Competitiveness Report 2009 The Africa Competitiveness Report 2009 The Global Gender Gap Report 5 The Global Information Technology Report Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Besides the Global Competitiveness Report, the World Economic Forum produces regional and sector-specific reports, among which the Global Information Technology Report (GITR) series. 2008-2009 2007-2008 2006-2007 2005-2006 6 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries The Global Information Technology Report Launched in 2001, at first, in collaboration with the Information Technologies’ Group of the Center for International Development at Harvard University and, from 2002, with INSEAD. Taking into account the crucial importance of information and communication technologies (ICT) for countries’ development and growth, the GITR is a powerful tool for business leaders and policy makers in understanding the enabling factors of ICT advancement. The Networked Readiness Index (NRI) measures the propensity for countries/economies to exploit the opportunities offered by ICT and establishes a broad international framework mapping out the enabling factors of such capacity. 7 The Global Information Technology Report ICT readiness is correlated to economic growth 12 Log of GDP (PPP $) per capita, 2007 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries 11 y = 1.27x + 3.99 R2 = 0.71 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 NRI 2008-2009 score 8 The Networked Readiness Index The Framework Individual Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Environment Business Government Readiness Individual Business Government Usage 9 The Networked Readiness Index Composition Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Networked Readiness Index (NRI) Environment Readiness Usage Market Environment Individual Readiness Individual Usage Political/Regulatory Environment Business Readiness Business Usage Infrastructure Environment Government Readiness Government Usage 10 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Use of hard data (publicly available information from sources such as the International Telecommunication Union, the World Bank, UNESCO, United Nations, etc.). Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Data sources And survey data (from the Executive Opinion Survey), which records the perspectives of business leaders around the world; survey data is indispensable, particularly for variables where no reliable hard data sources exist. In 2008, over 11,000 business leaders from 134 countries responded to the Survey. 11 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Data sources: The Executive Opinion Survey Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries The sample of respondents is carefully selected in each country by the Partner Institute to reflect the structure of a country’s GDP. It is structured around eleven major issue areas, each of significant relevance to the current state of an economy’s business environment, asking participants to respond to a total of 130 questions based on their own experiences of operating a business in the country in which they are based. The Survey is translated into over 20 languages and is available online. 12 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Data Sources The mix of hard and soft data Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries allows the index to capture: dimensions important for national networked readiness for which there is no quantitative data available, such as the presence of laws relating to ICT, the venture capital availability or the quality of the education system in one country; the perception and the insight of the business community in each country covered on a selected number of dimensions. provides a useful platform for dialogue between the government and the private sector. 13 The Network Readiness Index What data do we use? HARD DATA: 27 indicators (40%) Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Breakdown of indicators used in the NRI by type of data SURVEY DATA 41 indicators (60%) Total: 68 indicators 14 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Examples of variables used in the calculation Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Environment (30) Readiness (23) Usage (15) Venture capital availability Quality of math and science education Cellular mobile subscribers Administrative burden US utility patents University/industry research collaboration Broadband/DSL Internet subscribers High tech exports Company spending on R&D Laws relating to ICT Prevalence of foreign technology licence Efficiency of legal framework Residential telephone connection charges Capacity for innovation Quality of business schools Extent of business Internet use Telephone mainlines Availability of scientists and engineers Business telephone connection charges Government online services Quality of scientific research institutions Government procurement of ICT Government success in ICT promotion Accessibility of digital content Government vision for ICT ICT use and government efficiency 15 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Top 20 performers and selected economies Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries (score from 1 to 7) Denmark Sweden United States Singapore Switzerland Finland Iceland Norway Netherlands Canada Korea, Rep. Hong Kong SAR Taiwan, China Australia United Kingdom Austria Japan Estonia France Germany United Arab Tunisia China Thailand South Africa India Brazil Turkey Russian Fed. Egypt Nigeria Chad 1 2 3 4 5 6 167 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Middle East and the GCC region (score from 1 to 7) Israel United Arab Emirates Qatar Tunisia Saudi Arabia Jordan Oman Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Bahrain Kuwait Egypt Morocco Syria Libya Algeria 1 2 3 4 5 6 17 The Networked Readiness Index The GCC region: Evolution, 2006-2008 (score from 1 to 7) 2006-2007 2007-2008 2008-2009 Qatar Bahrain Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries United Arab Emirates Saudi Arabia Oman Kuwait 1 2 3 4 5 6 18 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Bahrain vs. selected comparators Bahrain Denmark MENA Market environment 7 Government use 6 Political and regulatory environment 4 3 Business use Infrastructure environment 2 1 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries 5 Individual use Individual readiness Bahrain’s rank: 37 Government readiness Business readiness 19 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Kuwait vs. selected comparators Kuwait Denmark MENA Market environment 7 6 Political and regulatory environment 5 4 3 Business use Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Government use Infrastructure environment 2 1 Individual use Individual readiness Kuwait’s rank: 57 Government readiness Business readiness 20 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Oman vs. selected comparators Oman Denmark MENA Market environment 7 6 Political and regulatory environment 5 4 3 Business use Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Government use Infrastructure environment 2 1 Individual use Individual readiness Oman’s rank: 50 Government readiness Business readiness 21 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Qatar vs. selected comparators Qatar Denmark MENA Market environment 7 6 Political and regulatory environment 5 4 3 Business use Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Government use Infrastructure environment 2 1 Individual use Individual readiness Qatar’s rank: 29 Government readiness Business readiness 22 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Saudi Arabia vs. selected comparators Saudi Arabia Denmark MENA average Market environment 7 6 Political and regulatory environment 5 4 3 Business use Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Government use Infrastructure environment 2 1 Individual use Individual readiness Saudi Arabia’s rank: 40 Government readiness Business readiness 23 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 United Arab Emirates vs. selected comparators United Arab Emirates Denmark MENA Market environment 7 6 Political and regulatory environment 5 4 3 Business use Infrastructure environment 2 1 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Government use Individual use Individual readiness United Arab Emirates’ rank: 27 Government readiness Business readiness 24 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Market environment: utility patents per million population 266.92 Taiwan, China 263.67 261.05 Japan 160.72 Finland 129.71 Korea, Rep. 61.09 Iceland 5.97 Spain Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries United States 2.25 Kuwait Saudi Arabia 0.83 United Arab Emirates 0.46 Qatar 0.00 Oman 0.00 Bahrain 0.00 0 50 100 150 Source: US Patent and Trademark Office, 2007 200 250 300 25 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 Market environment: High tech exports (% total goods exports) 59.38 Philippines 49.68 Hong Kong SAR 49.44 45.14 Singapore 44.60 Taiwan, China 39.42 Malaysia 30.42 Ireland Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Malta Qatar 0.29 Saudi Arabia 0.07 Oman 0.02 United Arab Emirates 0.02 Bahrain 0.00 0 10 Source: The World Bank, 2008 20 30 40 50 60 70 26 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 GCC countries vs. top performers in education Finland United States Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates 7 5 4 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries 6 3 2 1 Availability of scientists and engineers Quality of scientific research institutions Quality of math and science education Quality of the educational system Local availability of Company University-industry specialized spending on R&D research research and collaboration training services 27 The Networked Readiness Index 2008-2009 GCC countries vs. top performers in e-government strategies Singapore Denmark Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates 7 5 4 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries 6 3 2 1 Government prioritization of ICT Government procurement of advanced technology products ICT Importance to government vision of the future Government success in ICT promotion Availability of government online services ICT use and government efficiency Presence of ICT in government offices 28 The Networked Readiness Index The most dynamic countries over the years Variations in Decile ranks of Countries from 2001-02 to 2008-09 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Country China Colombia Guatemala India Jamaica Jordan Lithuania Mauritius Nigeria Romania Russian Federation Ukraine Vietnam First inclusion Rank Decile 64 57 68 54 56 49 42 51 75 65 61 66 74 9 8 10 8 8 7 6 7 10 9 9 9 10 NRI 2008–2009 Rank Decile 46 64 82 54 53 44 35 51 90 58 74 62 70 4 5 7 5 4 4 3 4 7 5 6 5 6 Decile delta 5 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 4 3 4 4 29 The Networked Readiness Index The most dynamic regions over the years Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Variations in Decile ranks of Countries from 2001-02 to 2008-09 Regions * First inclusion Rank Decile NRI 2008–2009 Rank Decile Advanced Economies Africa Central & Eastern Europe CIS and Mongolia Developing Asia Middle East Western Hemisphere 14.5 60.5 37 63.5 59 54.5 51 15.5 109 58 90.5 77.5 47 79.5 2 8.5 5.5 9 8 7.5 7 2 9 5 7 6.5 4 6.5 Decile delta – -0.5 0.5 2 1.5 3.5 0.5 * IMF’s classification 30 The Global Information Technology Report Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Mobility in a networked world The overarching theme of this year’s Report is Mobility, with a special focus on mobile telephony and its impact on economic growth and networked readiness, but also on Internet ubiquity, mobile reality mining, and mobility of talents and research and development flows. Also the Report provides insight into best practices and policies in networked readiness and competitiveness, focusing on specific country case studies. The countries selected this year are Egypt, Korea, Rep., and Brazil, for, respectively, best practices as an outsourcing destination, general ICT strategy to promote national competitiveness, and the use of egovernment services and ICT to alleviate economic and social problems. 31 The Global Information Technology Report Mobility in a networked world From Mobility to Ubiquity: Ensuring the Power and Promise of Internet Connectivity ... for Anyone, Anywhere, Anytime, by Robert Pepper, Enrique J. Rueda-Sabater, Brian C. Boeggeman, and John Garrity (Cisco Systems, Inc.) How to Maximize the Economic Impact of Mobile Communications: The Four Waves, by Leonard Waverman (Haskayne School of Business, London Business School, and LECG) and Kalyan Dasgupta (LECG) Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Mobile Telephony: A Critical Enabler of Networked Readiness? By Thierry Geiger and Irene Mia (World Economic Forum) Unshackled: How Regulation Can Amplify Mobile Service Benefits in Emerging Markets, by Scott Beardsley, Luis Enriquez, Mehmet Guvendi, Miguel Lucas, Oleg Timchenko, Sergio Sandoval, and Ashish Sharma (McKinsey & Company, Inc.) Reality Mining of Mobile Communications: Toward a New Deal on Data, by Alex Pentland (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Global Mobility of Talents: What Will Make People Move, Stay, or Leave in 2015 and Beyond? by Vijayakumar Ivaturi (Wipro), Bruno Lanvin (INSEAD, eLab), and Hrishi Mohan (Wipro) R&D and Innovation in the ICT Sector: Toward Globalization and Collaboration, by Graham Vickery and Sacha Wunsch-Vincent (OECD) 32 The Global Information Technology Report Focus on best practices: Selected case studies How Outsourcing Can Help Mobilize Talents Globally: Egypt’s Success Story IT Korea: Past, Present, and Future By Jae Kyu Lee (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Choonmo Ahn (Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute) and Kihoon Sung (Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute) Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries By Nagwa El Shenawy (Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, Egypt) and Bruno Lanvin (INSEAD, eLab) Brazil: Will the 2014 Soccer World Cup Help Bridge the Social Gap through the Promotion of ICT and E-government? By Darcilene Magalhães (State Agency for IT Development, Brazil), Peter Knight (Telemática e Desenvolvimento Ltda., Brazil), and Eduardo Moreira da Costa (The Brazilian Innovation Agency) 33 Muscat| December 21st-23rd, 2009 Assessing the networked readiness of the GCC countries Thank You for Your Attention Visit our interactive website: http://www.insead.edu/v1/gitr/wef/main/home.cfm The Global Information Technology Report 2008-2009 is fully available for download on our website for the first time! 34