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USIA - INDEX MEASURES INFORMATION WEALTH OF NATIONS (96-06-06)
From: The United States Information Agency (USIA) Gopher at <gopher://gopher.usia.gov>
("There should be no losers," panel says) (760)
By Edmund F. Scherr USIA Staff Writer
Washington -- The ability of nations to absorb information technology is an
economic drive for which "there needs be no losers," according to speakers
who heralded the release of a survey measuring the information wealth of 55
nations.
They also emphasized at a press conference that the decisions that
governments, organizations, and individuals make over the next decade will
determine winners and losers in this new information age.
Wilfond Welch, director of global research of the World Times Publishing
Company, said that in this revolution "individual countries have the choice
to allocate resources" to be part of the information age.
World Times and the International Data Corporation (IDC), an information
technology data and consulting firm, on June 5 released its study of 55
developing and developed nations, which measures their ability to access,
adopt and absorb information and information technology.
The Information Imperative Index (III) measures 20 distinct factors to
provide a single indicator on a country's progress towards an economy
driven by information technology. At the top of the list is the United
States with a score of 5,107 on the III index. China is at the bottom with
335. The mean average of countries on the index is 1,819.
Donald Bellomy of IDC said that the report is a "benchmark." He said the
index, which they hope to update annually, will show countries what
progress they are making in the various information variables.
The 55 countries in the survey, the sponsors noted, account for 77 percent
of the world population, 97 percent of the world's gross domestic product
and 99 percent of the world's spending for information technology.
The 20 variables in the study are organized into three categories of
infrastructure for the index, including:
-- Social. This includes secondary school enrollment, newspaper readership,
press freedom and civil liberties.
-- Information. Such measurements as telephone lines/households, cellular
phones per capita, and radio and television ownership per capita.
-- Computer. This includes personal computers installed per capita,
software/hardware spending and percentage of networked personal computers.
The III is based on computer information gathered by IDC and data obtained
from various sources.
Countries in the index are placed in four groups:
Roller-bladers (over 4,000 points on the index). These countries show a
shift to a new level of individual information empowerment. The United
States and Sweden are the only countries in this category.
Striders (2,000 to 4,000). These nations display successful long-term
information technology investments. Countries in this group include South
Korea, Israel, Japan, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.
Sprinters (1,000 to 2,000). Countries in this group show steady high
growth. Russia, Chile, Spain and Ireland are among this group.
Joggers (ranking under 1,000). These nations show uneven growth, and
include China, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Brazil.
The speakers noted that consistency counts in the index. The United States
has the highest score in only 8 of the 20 variables, but its scores were
consistently high. Also, they noted that the size of population influences
the ranking. Per capita calculations pushed India. Indonesia, Pakistan and
China to the bottom of the rankings.
Another lesson drawn from the index is that social infrastructure counts.
New Zealand out points the United Kingdom largely due to a higher
percentage of college-age youth in schooling -- 82 percent compared with 42
percent in the United Kingdom.
In the social infrastructure, the speakers predicted that education will be
the key investment for broad participation in the global information
revolution.
Welch emphasized that the "variables in the index are highly dynamic. Many
elements in the information and computer infrastructures, even in the
social infrastructure are evolving rapidly and they will generate dramatic
changes over the next few years."
Following is the list of the 55 countries in group order in the information
wealth report:
R O L L E R - B L A D E R S --
United States
Sweden
S T R I D E R S --
Denmark, Norway, Finland, Australia, Canada, Switzerland, New Zealand,
United Kingdom, Netherlands, Germany, Japan, Hong Kong, Austria, Singapore,
Belgium, France, Israel, Italy, Taiwan, South Korea
S P R I N E R S --
Ireland, Spain, United Arab Emirates. Czech Republic, Hungary, Greece,
Portugal, Argentina, Chile, Poland, Bulgaria, Venezuela, South Africa,
Russia
J O G G E R S --
Malaysia, Brazil, Costa Rica, POanama, Mexico, Romania, Saudi Arabia,
Colomia, Thailand, Ecuador, Jordan, Turkey, Peru, Philippines, Egypt, India,
Indonesia, Pakistan, China.
From the United States Information Agency (USIA) Gopher at gopher://gopher.usia.gov
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