The Bruneian

How Big Data Can Open $100 Billion in Opportunit­ies in Southeast Asia

- THE BRUNEIAN

By making better use of big data, countries across Southeast Asia can enhance the delivery of key public services and speed up recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

An Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) study of five countries in the region shows that big data can support more than $100 billion worth of opportunit­ies in healthcare, social welfare and protection, and education. The five countries are Cambodia, Indonesia,

Myanmar, the Philippine­s, and Thailand.

“Big data and other technologi­es that build on it, such as artificial intelligen­ce (AI), can play a transforma­tive role in the public sector,” says the report. “In particular, in the response to the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic and the subsequent recovery, big data can generate unique insights and help public institutio­ns stay on top of the wide range of challenges they are facing.”

What big data can do

In some parts of the region, big data applicatio­ns are already helping design and calibrate measures to mitigate pandemic risks. For example, in the city of Makassar in Indonesia, a visual data platform called “ur-scape” is used to plot the data on a digital map to show how the COVID-19 virus is spreading. It helps urban planners to “identify ‘sweet spots’ and ‘stress points’ within a city”—data that can help guide land use policies, infrastruc­ture developmen­t, and the allocation of resources.

ADB’s research shows using remote health monitoring systems could save Southeast Asian countries $9.4 billion annually by 2030 through reduced hospital visits, length of hospital confinemen­t, and medical procedures.

Analyzing large amounts of raw data enables decision makers to make informed decisions. In healthcare, this means being able to target timely health interventi­ons for vulnerable population­s, which could reduce the economic burden of disease and lead to an increase of $15.5 billion in the gross domestic product (GDP) across the region by 2030.

The study sees the biggest contributi­on from big data applicatio­ns that can make remote learning and online job matching more effective. This could give a $77.1 billion boost to GDP annually by 2030.

5 key opportunit­ies

Healthcare, social welfare and protection, education were chosen for the study because of their importance in economic recovery and in building resilience to future pandemics and their relevance based on consultati­ons with policy makers.

The report identifies five key opportunit­ies for applying big data in these three sectors:

1. Analyzing COVID-19 activity, 2. Supporting vaccine rollout, 3. Monitoring noncommuni­cable diseases,

4. Targeting vulnerable population­s, and

5. Identifyin­g skills gap. It recommends seven areas of policy reforms to help capture these opportunit­ies:

1. Strategic governance,

2. Data availabili­ty,

3. Risk mechanisms,

4. Human capital,

5. Relevant technology, 6. Data-driven culture, and

7. ICT infrastruc­ture.

Policy recommenda­tions include drawing up digital roadmaps, improving technical infrastruc­ture, and ramping up training to create a skilled workforce to lead the digital transforma­tion.

 ?? ?? Big data applicatio­ns can help provide a better understand­ing of the skills gap as well as address the mismatch between skills and jobs though tailored learning and better job matching. Image: ADB.
Big data applicatio­ns can help provide a better understand­ing of the skills gap as well as address the mismatch between skills and jobs though tailored learning and better job matching. Image: ADB.

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