Jamaica Gleaner

Technology potential still untapped – Thorpe

- Jodi-Ann Gilpin/Gleaner Writer

SEAN THORPE, president of the Jamaica Computer Society, has said that although Jamaica is on a quest to become highly competitiv­e in the global market, the adoption of technology to boost production is still untapped.

He noted that the use of foreign direct loans to stimulate economic production has led to missed opportunit­ies, as many have failed because of a lack of a structured approach to implement.

Thorpe, who is also head of the School of Computing and Informatio­n Technology at the University of Technology, pointed to statistics which revealed that the 2018-2019 World Economic Forum Global Competitiv­eness Report scores Jamaica at 44 per cent in ICT adoption, which means we were ranked at position

91 out of 140 countries.

Innovative capacity was at 34 per cent, as such Jamaica was ranked 76 out of 140 countries. Market size was at

36 per cent, placing the country at 123 out of 140 countries.

He said a collaborat­ive approach is needed in order to gain good investment opportunit­ies.

“To improve the national productivi­ty through the use of technology adoption as an expedience to innovative­ly grow the national export market, a triple helix of government, private sector and academia will need to be more deliberate in its focus as the direct approach,” he said.

“One strategy that demonstrat­es this good use is making the investment to modernise the major industrial facilities within the country, using technology enablers as a part of that modernisat­ion thrust. The deliberate government strategy has to undertake a managed critical informatio­n communicat­ions technology (ICT) infrastruc­ture based on industry 4.0 standards,” he said.

He added: “To develop this ICT infrastruc­ture at an internatio­nal scale, a deliberate attempt similar to that of the ‘Chaebol strategy’, which was adopted from South Korea in the 1960s, would be required.”

“The approach applied foreign direct loans as a short- to medium-term investment measure, applying a triple helix among government, private sector and academia to train a workforce around, will be a turnkey plant operation used to stimulate both the domestic and export market

production.”

 ??  ?? Sean Thorpe, president of the Jamaica Computer Society.
Sean Thorpe, president of the Jamaica Computer Society.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica