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World Telecommunication Indicators Report 2006: Measuring ICT for social and economic developmentMeasuring the Information Society 2007
ICT Opportunity Index and World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators

1st edition 2007, price: 70 Swiss Francs    ORDER NOW !

The ITU’s 2007 ICT Opportunity Index, which has benefited from the expertise of several international and research organizations, is based on a carefully selected list of indicators and methodology. It is an important tool to track the digital divide by measuring the relative difference in ICT Opportunity levels among economies and over time. The different sub-indices allow countries to further identify their specific weaknesses and strengths (see Figure 1).

Figure 1: 2007 ICT-OI: sub-indices and indicators

Source: ITU.

The 2007 ICT-OI, which is an inclusive index and provides measurement across 183 economies, relies on ten indicators that help measure ICT networks, education and skills, uptake and intensity of the use of ICT (Figure 1). For analytical purposes, economies are grouped into four categories, ranging from high to low ICT Opportunities. Apart from cross-country comparisons, the index’s methodology highlights relative movements between 2001-2005. A comparison of annual average growth rates shows which countries are making progress and how fast.

 The 2007 ICT-OI results showed that significant progress has been made across almost all economies and all areas of the telecommunication/ ICT sector since the beginning of this century. At the same time, major differences remain. Countries with low ICT Opportunity levels are heavily concentrated in Africa, with some Asian countries in this category represented as well. From the Americas, Haiti, Cuba, Honduras and Nicaragua also have low ICT-OI levels. Many of the countries with the highest growth rates (between 2001 and 2005) are Least Developed Countries (LDCs). While this is a positive development, growth rates need to be seen in perspective since high growth rates are not necessarily sufficient to overcome the digital divide, particularly in countries that start at very low ICT levels. It is also true that not all developing countries have high growth rates and the list of the countries with the lowest growth rates includes some LDCs.

 The ICT-OI highlights that between 2001-2005 the divide increased between those economies that already have very high ICT levels and the rest of the world. It decreased between the medium group and the low group, indicating that countries with low levels of ICT have somewhat been able to catch up and reduce the divide compared to countries in the medium level.

 An indicator-centric analysis suggests that the majority of countries are lagging behind in terms of broadband uptake and the difference in broadband penetration between economies with high ICT-OI levels and the rest of the world is significant and greater than for any other indicator. For policy makers, this finding suggests that more efforts need to be undertaken to integrate and strengthen broadband policies and strategies.

 The 2007 ICT-OI, which is the result of the merger of the ITU’s Digital Access Index (DAI) and Orbicom’s Monitoring the Digital Divide/Infostate conceptual framework has been modified since it was last published in 2005. It is an excellent example for successful international cooperation and partnership work and follows the explicit recommendation of the WSIS Plan of Action, paragraph 28, to “…develop and launch a composite ICT Development (Digital Opportunity) Index” to combine statistical indicators with analytical work on policies and their implementation.   

Table 1: 2007 ICT-OI values and sub-indices: networks, skills, uptake and intensity, and ICT-OI average annual growth rate 2001-2005
 
 Economy NETWORKs
index
SKILLS
index
UPTAKE
index
INTENSITY
index
ICT-OI
value
Average annual growth rate 2001-2005

 HIGH ICT-OI VALUES (Total of 29 economies)

 Sweden 605.1 153.8 464.5 470.59 377.69 43.52
 Luxembourg 675.5 112.0 412.6 607.37 371.10 77.20
 Hong Kong, China 553.7 117.0 366.7 751.74 365.54 57.09
 Netherlands 555.6 141.6 472.6 466.09 362.82 53.04
 Denmark 616.5 145.8 390.2 483.22 360.79 42.07

  ... more

 UPPER ICT-OI VALUES (Total of 28 economies)
 Slovenia 261.8 146.0 332.2 289.02 246.13 59.12
 Antigua & Barbuda 444.0 123.8 236.1 277.26 244.92 92.75
 Aruba 316.9 123.8 155.7 528.52 238.36 68.90
 Cyprus 233.6 121.3 279.1 307.04 221.95 42.80
 Latvia 228.7 138.5 262.1 275.85 218.77 98.92

  ... more

 MEDIUM ICT-OI VALUES (Total of 63 economies)
 New Caledonia 158.1 137.1 102.0 208.96 146.61 60.79
 Uruguay 145.9 128.2 164.0 137.49 143.31 37.66
 Argentina 149.4 137.1 135.3 140.23 140.40 37.86
 Seychelles 151.3 102.1 197.5 124.83 139.67 21.00
 Lebanon 110.6 120.9 153.9 182.19 139.15 49.61

  ... more

 LOW ICT-OI VALUES (Total of 63 economies)
 Indonesia 57.5 102.6 48.8 72.84 67.68 44.87
 Libya 48.5 126.3 42.0 77.07 66.71 46.47
 Botswana 82.4 93.1 30.1 83.02 66.16 11.02
 Nicaragua 48.3 99.4 44.7 78.98 64.18 35.80
 Honduras 57.7 99.6 38.7 72.33 63.35 35.72

  ... more

Source: ITU.

Note: The four sub-indices are composed of the following indicators: Network index: fixed telephone lines per 100 inhabitants, mobile cellular subscribers per 100 inhabitants, and international internet bandwidth (kbps per inhabitant). Skills index: adult literacy rate, and gross school enrolment rates. Uptake index: computers per 100 inhabitants, Internet users per 100 inhabitants and proportion of households with a TV. Intensity index: total broadband internet subscribers per 100 inhabitants, international outgoing telephone traffic (minutes) per capita.
The 'average annual growth rate (2001-2005)' refers to the growth of ICT-OI values between 2001 and 2005.

 

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Updated : 2007-08-28