Pakistan Today

Pakistan unimpressive in IT competitiveness

Pakistan is losing ground compared to other countries in information technology, the Business Software Alliance (BSA) recently reported in its 2011 edition of the Economist Intelligence Unit’s IT Industry Competitiveness Index.

Repeated revisions

Updated for the fourth time since 2007, the index benchmarks 66 countries on a series of indicators covering the critical foundation areas for IT innovation that include overall business environment, IT infrastructure, human capital, research and development (R&D), legal environment and public support for industry development. Pakistan gained only two spots to 61in the worldwide ranking, which is not impressive when compared to other developing countries due to poor showing on indicators of overall business environment, legal environment and government support for industry development. “Pakistan has gained only two spots in this year’s rankings because of its poor performance in protecting intellectual property rights,” BSA President and CEO Robert Holleyman said. “In the years ahead, policymakers in Pakistan have an opportunity to improve in that area. We know from global experience it will be worth the effort.”

Commenting on this, Kamal Ahmed, Country General Manager, Microsoft Pakistan said, “This is not an encouraging sign for Pakistan’s IT industry. Our IT industry employs more than 12,000 professionals with the growth rate of almost 41 per cent, while generating over $2 billion annually in tax revenue. It would benefit all if we aim high for the next year’s index”. Topping the overall rankings for 2011 are the United States, Finland, Singapore, Sweden and the United Kingdom. This year’s index finds that countries traditionally strong in IT are maintaining their positions of leadership in part because “advantage begets advantage” — they have built up solid foundations for technology innovation through years of investment and they are continuing to reap the benefits. But the global field of competition is becoming more crowded as new challengers, especially in developing economies, raise their games to meet the standards the leaders have set. “It is abundantly clear from this year’s IT Industry Competitiveness Index that investing in the fundamentals of technology innovation will pay huge dividends over the long term,” said Holleyman. “It is also clear that no country holds a monopoly in information technology. There is a proven formula for success, and everyone is free to take advantage of it. Because of that, we are moving to a world with many centers of IT power.” The biggest movers in this year’s index compared to the previous edition in 2009 include Malaysia, which vaulted 11 spots in the overall rankings because of a surge in research and development activity, and India, which leapt 10 spots on the strength of its robust research and development and dynamic human capital environment. A number of other countries — including Singapore, Mexico, Austria, Germany and Poland — posted strong overall gains this year by showing new levels of strength across the board in all IT foundation areas.

Substantive competitive gains
“As the global economy starts to recover, it is more important than ever for governments to take a long-term view of IT industry development,” Holleyman said. “Policymakers cannot not just look at this issue on an annual basis, or they risk being left behind. They must assess the next seven to nine years, and invest accordingly, in order to make substantive gains in IT competitiveness.”

Exit mobile version