NRI ranking reflects Lanka's ICT strides - ICTA CEO
The Networked Readiness Index (NRI) 2013 reflects the multiple
strides reached by the country's ICT sector, said ICT Agency of Sri
Lanka (ICTA) CEO, Reshan Dewapura.
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Reshan Dewapura |
"The Global Information Technology Report (GITR) published for the
12th consecutive year corroborates that Sri Lanka continues to make
progress in the ICT sector. The report published by the World Economic
Forum and the Institut Européen d'Administration des Affaires (INSEAD)
is a source of strength for the country to advance further," he said.
Sri Lanka has improved its ICT standing including the overall
position by two places in the Global Networked Readiness Index (NRI)
published in the 'Global Information Technology Report (GITR)' 2013.
Last year this overall position stood at 71. This year it stands at 69.
The NRI assesses the comparative impact of ICT in the countries
concerned (144 economies in 2013) under four sub-indices and 10 pillars
coming under these sub-indexes and several indicators under the pillars.
The sub-indexes are environment, readiness, usage and impact. The
pillars are: political and regulatory environment, business and
innovation environment, infrastructure and digital content,
affordability, skills, individual usage, business usage, government
usage, economic impacts and social impacts.
The World Economic Forum (WEF) is based in Cologny.
INSEAD is a world-renowned graduate business school headquartered in
New York with campuses in France, Singapore and Abu Dhabi.
The NRI was originally developed by the Information Technology Group
which worked at the Harvard University's Centre for International
Development until 2002. This time 144 countries were surveyed in
preparing the NRI 2013 and Sri Lanka obtained the 69th place improving
from the 71st place it occupied last year. Sri Lanka's NRI (2013) also
makes it the second highest ranked among South Asia Association for
Regional Cooperation (SAARC) countries, trailing India by just one rank.
However, the absolute value or score for Sri Lanka and India is the
same.
Sri Lanka and India are the only two SAARC countries ranked higher
than the 100th mark. Out of other SAARC countries Pakistan, Bangladesh
and Nepal stand at 105, 114 and 126. South Africa, Indonesia, Vietnam
and the Philippines rank behind Sri Lanka as per the Networked Readiness
Index 2013.
Sri Lanka has scored very high in the affordability measure (fourth
pillar) with mobile cellular tariffs ranking at fifth place based on
purchasing power parity and second for fixed broadband.
In pillar one, Political and regulatory environment, Sri Lanka ranks
25th in effectiveness of law-making bodies, including parliament; Sri
Lanka ranks 33rd and 34th in efficiency of legal system in settling
disputes and efficiency of legal system in challenging regulations.
At the core of the report, the Networked Readiness Index (NRI)
measures the preparedness of an economy to use ICT to boost
competitiveness and well-being.
In this edition, Finland (first), Singapore (second) and Sweden
(third) continue to lead the NRI, with the Netherlands (fourth), Norway
(fifth), Switzerland (sixth), the United Kingdom (seventh), Denmark
(eighth), the United States (nineth) and Taiwan, China (10th) completing
the top 10.
However the report highlighted the lack of progress in bridging the
new digital divide, not only in terms of developing ICT infrastructure
but also in economic and social impact.
Despite rapid adoption of mobile telephony, most developing economies
lag behind advanced economies due to environments that are
insufficiently conducive to innovation and competitiveness.
On the other hand, the report showed the progress that countries make
by using ICT to boost productivity, economic growth and quality jobs.
Finally, the report revealed an apparent investment threshold in ICT,
skills and innovation beyond which return on investment increases
significantly.
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