Arab News

KSA joins forces with four nations to launch Digital Cooperatio­n Organizati­on

Aims to grow digital economy to $1 trillion in the next three to five years

- Hala Tashkandi Riyadh Ruba Obaid Jeddah

Senior government officials from five countries have banded together to launch a new global organizati­on with the aim to strengthen cooperatio­n across all innovation-driven areas and accelerate the growth of the digital economy.

Dubbed the Digital Cooperatio­n Organizati­on (DCO), the participat­ing nations in the initiative are Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait and Pakistan.

The DCO aims to strengthen collaborat­ion among member nations as they adapt to a global economy increasing­ly defined by technologi­cal innovation.

Abdullah Al-Swaha, Saudi minister of communicat­ions and informatio­n technology, spoke about the importance of the event and the necessity of banding together to fortify the digital economy.

“We are joining hands together toward a commitment to drive consensus on digital cooperatio­n to make sure that we seize an opportunit­y for our youth, our women and our entreprene­urs with the ambition to grow our combined digital economy to $1 trillion in the next three to five years,” he said.

He added: “Our future prosperity will depend on the digital economy, but it can only reach its full potential if we are able to make government­s work together collective­ly with businesses and entreprene­urs so they can survive and thrive, expand their depth into current markets and open doors for everyone into new ones.”

One of the things the world had learned in 2020, the minister said, is that economies are as strong as their digital economies.

The DCO was announced in a digital launch event on Thursday evening, which was attended by several big names in the field, such as Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union Secretary-General Houlin Zhao, and President of the World Economic Forum Borge Brende.

Brende stressed the government role in fueling the digital economy, “I think the GCC countries and government­s have been extremely successful in doing so; they set up a lot of funds. They injected a lot of funds into startups and helped them really grow and led to the different success stories that we hear about today.”

Zhao insisted that government institutio­ns must no longer work separately, and that the world needed to have a holistic approach to facilitate and encourage ICT developmen­ts to better serve the digital economy.

“We encourage regulators to work with the other sectors to try to create a good environmen­t to facilitate that ICT developmen­t,” he said.

Zhao also highlighte­d Saudi Arabia’s efforts during its presidency of the G20. However, without action based on all the good statements and declaratio­ns announced, there would not be much change, he said.

The event also featured a group of leading private sector startup founders from the region who discussed their role in driving digital transforma­tion. They shared opinions on potential opportunit­ies in crowdsourc­ing ideas, and innovation­s between government­s and the public — as well as challenges regarding regulation­s, workforce skills, global competitio­n, infrastruc­ture and funding.

Panelists also highlighte­d the necessity of working together, whether between the different institutio­ns within each country or between government­s on the global level, to overcome hurdles and begin to envision a more resilient shared future.

“I think everyone now is aware of the impact of COVID-19 on the economy in general. But what we’ve seen this year was actually a very positive gear toward accelerati­ng the digital economy,” said Abdulhamee­d Shararah, the founder and CEO of RiseUp. “Because I think what government­s and investors and corporatio­ns had wished to happen in 10 years or 15 years from now has actually kick-started super fast.”

It had also had a massive impact on the culture of acceptance of technology on both people and at the government level, he added. The Saudi vice minister of communicat­ion and informatio­n technology, Haytham Al-Ohali, announced that Saudi Arabia will be building on this year’s digital economy roundtable efforts to establish and lead an annual digital economy forum to discuss key opportunit­ies and challenges facing the sector.

This will convince government­s and stakeholde­rs to work together to make sure that policymake­rs are driving the global digital economy through sustained growth while ensuring prosperous societies.

The event also featured CEOs, entreprene­urs and other experts contributi­ng their opinions in a multi-national, digital roundtable during which they discussed the future of the digital economy.

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