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Friday September 16, 2011 |
The International Telecommunications Union yesterday released its Measuring
the Information Society 2011 report,
which benchmarks information society developments worldwide. The
centrepiece of the report is the ICT Development Index, which tracks 11
different indicators focused on access, use, and skills (the eleven
indicators are: fixed telephone line subscriptions, mobile
subscriptions, international Internet bandwidth, households with a
computer, households with Internet access, percentage of individuals
using the Internet, broadband subscriptions, mobile broadband
subscriptions, adult literacy, secondary and tertiary enrolment). Among
the indicators, skills are worth 20 percent, while access and use count
for 40 percent each. The news for Canada was not good as we fell from
20th in 2008 (the last
time the ITU issued its report) to 26th worldwide today. Topping the
list was South Korea, but Canada finds itself behind much of Europe,
the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, and several other Asian
countries.
While the National Post's Terence Corcoran tries
to cherry pick
one indicator - Internet use - to argue that the report shows Canada as
a leader, he actually gets it wrong as the report shows Canada in 13th
spot, not 2nd as he suggests (pages 154-55 of the report provides the full
breakdown showing Canada behind South Korea, the UK, New Zealand, the
Netherlands among others). Canada's rank on the access and use
indicators:
Indicator
|
Canada's
Rank
|
Percentage of individuals using
the Internet
|
13th
|
Fixed broadband Internet
subscriptions per 100 inhabitants
|
14th
|
Active mobile broadband
subscriptions per 100 inhabitants
|
57th
|
Fixed telephone subscriptions
per 100 inhabitants
|
12th
|
Mobile subscriptions per 100
inhabitants
|
111th
|
International Internet bandwidth
Bit/s per Internet user
|
24th
|
Percentage of households with
computer
|
13th
|
Percentage of households with
Internet
|
17th
|
It is hard to see how anyone can look at these results and conclude
that Canada is a leader in ICT development. Canada ranks outside the
top ten in every indicator and an incredible 111th on mobile
subscriptions and 57th on mobile broadband. The reality is that
virtually every neutral survey or study over the past several years has
had other countries leapfrogging ahead of Canada as we reap the results
of a missing national digital strategy, restrictions on foreign
investment, and ongoing competitive concerns.
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