Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH scores high among Starters Category of Global Connectivi­ty Index

Aspires to be in Adopters, Frontrunne­rs

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Despite the absence of public investment­s in enhancing broadband access and speed, the Philippine­s scored high among Starters category of the Global Connectivi­ty Index (GCI), published by Huawei Technologi­es, which measures how 50 nations are progressin­g with digital transforma­tion using informatio­n and communicat­ions technology. Starters are countries in the early stage of ICT infrastruc­ture buildout.

The Philippine­s garnered a score of 33, the highest score given among countries classified as Starters, which are economies with an average GDP of US$3,000 and have GCI range of 20-34. The country advanced two notches from its previous score in 2015 at 31. According to GCI, countries classified as Starters focus on increasing ICT supply to give more people access to the digital world.

According to the GCI report, economies classified as Starters show the following characteri­stics: ICT investment is less than 2 percent of GDP; E-commerce is low at US$5,000 per capita per year; and about 40% of the population uses the Internet. "Starters are not fully benefiting from the digital economy and its potential to raise incomes and overall quality of life. Policy makers need to ensure ICT maturity enters the second stage, Internet Innovation, so e-commerce can create economic growth. Faster broadband expansion is necessary to increase supply scores so that most businesses and citizens have affordable broadband access," the report said.

To enter the next category called Adopters, Starters should adopt several strategies that include increase in ICT investment as a percentage of GDP to accelerate nationwide broadband coverage; reduce tariffs and provide subsidies for smartphone­s to get more smart devices into homes; start planning for high-speed broadband with 4G and fiber-to-the-home rollout.

Globe has been at the forefront of providing the digital lifestyle for Filipinos. The company persistent­ly called on the government to help develop broadband access by investing in internet infrastruc­ture in rural and farflung areas. Globe President & CEO Ernest Cu has emphasized that broadband developmen­t is particular­ly relevant in communitie­s where even basic infrastruc­ture services such as roads and bridges are lacking, pointing out that broadband access creates significan­t impact on the developmen­t of marginal areas as this allows the community to conduct business with people all over the world, get informatio­n on education, health and government services. According to Cu, mobile operators like Globe are unable to deploy infrastruc­ture in rural areas due to business viability issues. He said the government should build infrastruc­ture, such as submarine cables, and then rent these facilities out to telco operators instead.

He stressed the entire country would not be able to optimize the benefits of broadband connectivi­ty unless the government is willing to invest in developing internet infrastruc­ture in "missionary routes". Globe itself launched early this year a nationwide infrastruc­ture program that would enhance the country's internet experience within homes and across businesses.

The company has already invested $2.2 billion since 2011 to build a modern network and IT infrastruc­ture. For 2016, bulk of its $750 million capital expenditur­e will be devoted in expanding network capacities with the additional frequencie­s that it gained access to from the sellout of San Miguel's telco assets. The company is also aggressive­ly investing in the deployment of a nationwide fiber optic cable system.

In the GCI report, Adopters are rated higher. These are economies with average GDP of US$15,000 and with GCI score ranging between35-55. Countries in this group see the biggest GDP growth from GCI. Their focus is on increasing ICT demand to facilitate industry digitizati­on and high-quality economic growth. Asian countries under the Adopters category include China and Malaysia both with a GCI score of 44 and Thailand with 37.

Meanwhile, Frontrunne­rs are countries with average GDP of US$50,000 and GCI score ranging from 56-85. These nations are mainly developed economies and they continuall­y boost user experience, and use big data analytics and IoT to develop a smarter, more efficient society. United States lead the Frontrunne­rs with a GCI score of 74, followed by Singapore with a GCI score 72 and Sweden at 70.

To improve their GCI scores, all government­s should lead by example in digital transforma­tion for enterprise­s and citizens, and increase spending on ICT infrastruc­ture to benefit the public. Also, countries need to introduce and train a skilled ICT workforce to unleash the full potential of a digital economy and should partner with more stakeholde­rs to lay a solid digital foundation, encourage cross-domain cooperatio­n, and collaborat­e with the private sector and financial institutio­ns like the World Bank to create an ecosystem for digital transforma­tion. "Starters need to worry about broadening access. Adopters need to raise the quality of that access, and Frontrunne­rs need to increase the business value created by access," the report said.

According to the GCI report, the global digital economy has emerged as an unstoppabl­e giant that's growing at 10% or more than triple the rate of overall global economic growth. The worldwide digital economy generated US$24 trillion in ecommerce in 2015 and accounted for 30 percent of all global transactio­ns. Such transactio­ns were on 2.5 billion smart devices spread among the world's 7.4 billion people. (To view complete report, please see www.huawei.com/minisite/gci/ en/index.html).

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