DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION IN THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN
• Economic Growth Through Digital Transformation
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION IN THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN
By Justin Ram
•
• Background • The regulatory environment and infrastructure deficits • How to promote digital skills and literacy • Digital technologies that should be embraced by the ECCU • How to expedite digitization of government services • A digitization framework for OECS businesses • Recommendations
Content
Background
Vulnerabilities, Challenges and Opportunities
Economic Growth has been low and volatile
Debt Levels were reduced prior to COVID-19
Country
Average (2000-2018) 2019 2020
Antigua and Barbuda
96.0 77.2 81.7
63.3 67.5 57.8 57.0 61.4 67.6 62.4
85.6 82.3 72.1 76.0 97.6 70.9 80.7
Dominica Grenada
St. Kitts and Nevis
111.7
Saint Lucia
59.4
St. Vincent and the Grenadines 66.7
ECCU
82.1
Persistent Caribbean Challenges
Cross-cutting Challenges
Source: Blueprint for Caribbean Economies
Blueprint Policy Prescriptions
Blueprint for Caribbean Economies
Source: Blueprint for Caribbean economies
Challenges • Inadequate training and skills for the digital era; • Large skills-job mismatches • Significant increases in unemployment in 2020 • Digital infrastructure: reliability and access of broadband services remain challenging; • Legislation and regulation challenges; • A comprehensive cybersecurity or data protection framework remains underdeveloped and uncoordinated;
Digital Challenges and Opportunitites
Opportunities • Post-COVID-19 acceleration of growth, improve public service delivery and build resilience; • Enhanced output and productivity; online services, e-commerce; • Finance and Investment in digital technologies;
Digital Challenges and Opportunitites
Improvements
• Market liberalization and fiber-optic infrastructure upgrades • Improved capacity, reliability, and access to networks • Network upgrades • Penetration rates for internet usage and mobile telephones have improved
The Regulatory Environment and Infrastructure Deficits
Deficits
• Slow pace in adopting new technologies, low connectivity, and high pass-through costs to consumers; • Regulatory frameworks, consumer protection, data privacy, and digital security are still in infancy stages; • Eastern Caribbean region still lags behind other small states in deploying the latest generation networks and infrastructure; • The quality and affordability of broadband services pose significant challenges to digital transformation efforts across the Eastern Caribbean region
The Regulatory Environment and Infrastructure Deficits
Internet Usage in the Eastern Caribbean Region
Broadband prices 2016 vs 2019
The Regulatory Environment
Inadequate to address a rapidly evolving ICT and digital environment
Must be modernized for the region to harness the digital economy's benefits fully
The region must be able to promote consumer and business interests adequately
The investment environment must be adequate to fill market failures and remain
Regulatory challenges in payment systems infrastructure continue to hamper financial services innovation
Resilient and reliable infrastructure networks are needed to facilitate secure information systems and online transactions.
current with the rapid technology evolution
Data Protection and Privacy Law
Country
E-Commerce Law
Cybercrime Laws
Data Protection Act, 2013 No 10 of 2013
Antigua Barbuda
and
Electronic Transactions Act, No. 24 of 2013 Electronic Transactions Act, 2013 Electronic Transactions Act, 2013
Electronic Crimes Act, 2013
Dominica
No Legislation
No Legislation
Electronic Crimes Bill 2013 Electronic Communications Bill 2021 Electronic Crimes Act, 2009 Computer Misuse Act 2011, Evidence and Electronic Transactions Act 2011 2016 Cybercrime Act and 2009 Electronic Transactions Act
Grenada
No Legislation
Select ICT Legislation in the Eastern Caribbean
Data
Protection
Electronic Transaction Act no. 9 of 2011
St Kitts and Nevis
Act, 5 of 2018
Electronic Transaction Act, 2011 (not enacted)
Data Protection Act, No 11 of 2011
Saint Lucia
St Vincent and The Grenadines
Electronic Transactions Act No. 6 of 2015
Privacy Act of 2003
Security concerns over privacy and protection of data and increased threats of cybercrimes
Increased threat to consumer privacy is driven by the vulnerability of consumer data due to the widespread use of digital services Digital transformation has resulted in businesses collecting more data, becoming increasingly vulnerable to hackers, stolen data, and other cyberattacks Such risks can deter individuals and businesses' willingness to utilize digital services, ultimately impeding the region’s digital transformation progress An enabling environment for the region’s digital economy should prioritizes consumer protection, data protection, and cybersecurity
Security and Consumer Protection
Existing national legislation and National Cybersecurity Strategies in the OECS countries
Key Complete In progress None No information
Legislation
National Cybersecurity Strategy
Country
Consumer Protection
Privacy and Data protection
Cybercrime
Antigua and Barbuda
Dominica Grenada Montserrat St. Kitts and Nevis St. Lucia St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Source: CDB 2019, IDB 2020
Promoting digital skills and literacy to ensure that citizens can participate in the digital economy
Education, Private Sector, Public Sector
Education Sector: • Focus on high-level ICT related training and skill development; • Training in digital competencies, including soft skills; • Teachers and education providers should be trained with requisite ICT knowledge and skills; Private and Public Sector • Employees should formally train staff to increase the percentage of the workforce with formal training in advanced ICT-related areas;
Promotion of digital skills
Digital technologies
Automation, Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Big Data Analytics, Smart Home Technology, Cloud Computing
• Artificial intelligence (AI) • Robotics • Blockchain • Internet of Things (IOT) • Big Data • Smart Home Technology • Cloud Computing • 3D Printing
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
Digital Readiness Index
Three pillars : • Digital Infrastructure • Digital Platforms • Facilitation
The Digital Readiness Index is a composite index: Step 1: determining the components necessary for digital transformation; Step 2: selecting and compiling proxy indicators; Step 3: applying normalization methodology to data; and Step 4: computing and aggregating the index.
Constructing the Index
Data used for the Digital readiness index
INDICATOR
Antigua and Barbuda
Dominica Grenada St. Kitts & Nevis
Saint Lucia
St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Aggregate Weight
Weights %
Digital Infrastructure
Mobile Cellular Subscription (per 100 people) (2019)
192.8
105.8
102.0
147.7
101.7
92.9
25
40
Fixed Broadband Penetration (per 100 people) (2019)
9.4
16.1
22.8
55.8
17.7
19.5
25
Active Mobile-Broadband subscription (per 100 people) 2017
50.3
93.9
58.0
51.6
42.5
54.0
25
% of Individuals using the Internet (2017)
73.0
67.0
55.9
76.8
43.1
55.6
25
Digital Platforms
Cybersecurity Index - National Cybersecurity Index (2019)
11.7
3.9
14.3
10.4
9.1
9.1
25
40
Global Cybersecurity Index (ITU 2017)
0.2
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.2
25
% of Population with 3-G coverage
99.0
95.0
81.9
100.0
37.1
100
25
E-Gov. Index (2019)
0.7
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.5
0.6
25
Facilitation
Digital Financial Services [Proxy with Number of ATMs per 100,000 population]
66.0
34.3
44.5
99.7
41.5
34.9
20
20
Ease of Doing Business Score (2020)
60.3
60.5
53.4
54.6
63.7
57.1
20
Human Capital Index
0.6
0.5
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.5
20
Regulatory Environment (2018)
40.8
72.5
74.0
46.0
85.0
80.0
20
Digital Entrepreneurship [Proxy with Trading Across Borders]
68.7
74.3
61.5
81.0
73.9
77.4
20
• Level of subjectivity in indicators selection, based on access to data and preference • Weighting is subjective • Proxy indicators compiled in most cases by internationally recognized agencies and with a comprehensive coverage of countries
Readiness Index Limitations
Overall digital readiness index scores ranged between 4.4 and 6.0 out of a maximum possible total of 10
Key Findings
The overall average readiness score was 5.3. No country obtained a perfect score on any of the 3 pillars examined
The scores indicate that the ECCU region is in the middle stage of digital readiness. The pillar which is at the lowest level of development (infancy stage) is that of facilitation
The average score for facilitation is 3.0, with the highest country score in St. Kitts and Nevis (3.3).
The most developed pillar was digital infrastructure, with St. Kitts and Nevis leading with a score of 8.1
Digital Readiness Index Result
DIGITAL READINESS (DRI) SCORE
ITU IDI READINESS SCORE 2017
COUNTRY
SCORE
RANK (ECCU)
SCORE
RANK (WORLD)
6.0
1
7.2
37
ST. KITTS AND NEVIS
5.8
2
5.7
76
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
5.5
3
5.5
82
ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
5.3
4
5.8
73
GRENADA
4.6
5
5.7
77
DOMINICA
4.4
6
4.6
104
SAINT LUCIA
PILLAR
Digital Infrastructure
Digital Platforms
Facilitation
Overall Score
8.1
6.5
3.3
ST. KITTS AND NEVIS
6.0
6.8
7.7
2.9
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
5.8
6.2
7.3
3.0
ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
5.5
6.1
7.0
2.8
GRENADA
5.3
6.1
4.7
2.9
DOMINICA
4.6
5.4
4.6
3.2
SAINT LUCIA
4.4
REGIONAL AVERAGE
6.4
6.3
3.0
5.3
Conclusion
Developing a digitally ready economy requires a holistic approach across multiple components that will entail: • Expansion of government services to ensure that all citizens can have equal access and reduce the digital divide • Building the technical skills that can drive a service-driven digital economy • Providing entrepreneurship opportunities that will advance vibrant, creative and technology-savvy businesses and a more inclusive economy • Facilitation and affordability necessary to create a business-friendly environment with support for start-ups and investment by the private sector
A Digitalization Framework for OECS Businesses
A Digitalization Framework for OECS Businesses
• Move to e-commerce platforms • Understand consumer behavior • Digitization and process automation • Modernization of payment systems
• Investments in cybersecurity • Human resource development • Use of data for continuous growth and improvement.
Recommendations
Recommendations
Regulatory environment development
Upgrade infrastructure
Data protection and cybersecurity enhancement
Education reform
Training to upskill existing employees in the private sector and public sector
Digitize internal systems and processes
Thank You Justin Ram
justin@justinram.com https://justinram.com
To build resilience, policymakers in the Eastern Caribbean will need to “change the wheels while the bus is moving”.
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