|

Philippines
"Asias Knowledge
Center"
I.T. Action Agenda for the
21st Century
Republic of the Philippines
NATIONAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY COUNCIL
Manila
October 1997
Republic of the Philippines
National Information Technology Council
PREFACE
IT21ACTION AGENDA FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
This National Information Technology Plan for the 21st
Century, or IT21, documents our common vision and presents our nations
broad strategy to spur our country to global competitiveness through information
technology. It sets down specific time frames for achieving these goals:
By the turn of the 21st century, the
Philippines will have laid the infrastructure for every business, every agency of
government, every school, and every home in the Philippines to have access to information
technology.
By the year 2005, IT use will be pervasive in daily life.
Philippine companies will be producing competitive IT products for world markets.
Within the first decade of the 21st Century, the
Philippines will be a Knowledge Center in the Asia-Pacific: the leader in IT education, in
IT-assisted training, and in the application of information and knowledge to business,
professional services, and the arts.
This document benefited from a study undertaken by a team
of international and local experts organized by the National Information Technology
Council (NITC) and the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), with
funding assistance from the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the national
government. Over a period of about six (6) months, the team consulted with industry
leaders, and various government officials to define the issues and recommend specific
measures needed in meeting the goals that were set for the I.T. sector, taking current
international experience and the state of I.T. into account.
The teams recommendations were summarized in a set of
technical papers, which provided the major basis for this document. The draft of the IT21
document was reviewed and approved with some modifications and presented to the
Legislative and Executive Development Council (LEDAC), and later during the same day last
October 28, 1997, was again presented to and approved by a joint meeting of the Cabinet
and the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Board chaired by the President.
Soon after, the President met with the heads of leading
global IT companies to forge strategic alliances in implementing specific projects
identified in IT21. The President also issued on November 7, 1997 Administrative Order No.
332 on the RPWEB, which directs government agencies to connect to the Internet.
These events just emphasize the impetus being given to IT21
from the highest levels of public office in the land. Urgent tasks lie ahead for
those who will follow.
- A number of policy issues in telecommunications and the
establishment of the Philippine Information Infrastructure have been resolved, but there
are still pending issues that must be addressed in "technology-neutral" ways.
- We have started capitalizing on global opportunities for
solutions to the "millennium bug" problem and other I.T.-related services, but
we still lack the critical mass of trained manpower to take a sizable share in the world
market.
- Government agencies have increased their use of the
Internet, but regular users of the Internet number only about one-tenth of one percent of
the total Philippine population.
- Many Philippine educational institutions are just starting
to experiment with the use of I.T. in education.
- We still need to gear up our science and technology
community for R&D activities in the field of information technology.
- We still need to have IT21 internalized by all the relevant
actors in the country.
It is therefore hoped that this document will serve as a
continuing framework to guide the directions for I.T. in the country over the next 10-25
years. Above all, however, our success will depend on the total commitment and support of
every one, of every sector -- to build up the momentum towards realizing our nations
vision in IT21: the transformation of the Philippines as a Knowledge Center in Asia in the
21st century.
CONTENTS
PREFACE
I Our Vision and Goal
II Situating I.T. in the Philippines
- The Global Picture
- Developments in Southeast Asia
- The Philippine Situation
III Our Strategy and Action Agenda
- Phases of our I.T. Development
- Our I.T. Development Strategy
- Our Action Agenda
- Phase 1Providing the Impetus
- Phase 2Building Up Momentum
- Phase 3Realizing Our Vision
TABLES
1. Asia-Pacific PC Shipments, 1995-96, by country of origin
2. Net Sales of the Top 350 I.T. Companies, 1994-1995, by
sector
3. Number of Telephone Lines Installed and Telephone
Density Index, 1989 - 1998
4. Comparative Telephone Densities: Philippines and Other
Asian Countries, 1992 - 1996
5. Telephone Services Across Regions, 1996
6. Export Performance of the Electronics Industry, 1992 -
1996
FIGURES
1. Growth of Internet Users Worldwide, 1995-2000
2. Philippine Telephone Density, 1989 - 1998
3. Employment in Philippine Electronics, 1985 - 1995
4. Philippine Exports of I.T. Services, 1989 - 2000
5. Philippine Exports of I.T. Services, by type, 1994 -
1996
6. I.T. Enrollment in the Philippines, 1990/91 - 1995/96
7. I.T. Graduates in the Philippines, 1990/91 - 1995/96
Part 1
Our Vision and Goal
The international community now sees the Philippines as
an emerging economy that bears watching. The country has proved resilient in containing
both domestic and external shocks with proper monetary policies and fiscal
management. Reforms that brought about liberalization, deregulation, and
privatization have significantly restructured industries towards greater efficiency.
The present administration has built a solid foundation from which the Philippines can be
propelled into the 21st century as a competitive and vibrant economy. The challenge
to all Filipinos is to nurture and build on these gains and to ensure that their
distribution will be as broad-based as possible.
These positive developments in the economy have contributed
to the overall bullishness in the Philippine I.T. industry today. Indeed, there is a lot
of gold to be mined in the Philippine I.T. landscape. The country can build its
capability in the design and manufacture of large-scale integrated circuits and
microprocessors and of microprocessor based process monitoring and control. Software
design, along with information and data services, has become areas where the country has
established certain advantages. Developments in telecommunications technology offer
new opportunities for the countrys professionals (e.g. medical practitioners,
engineers, etc.) to engage in distance professional serviceswhere the
presence of the professional is not required to provide such services. Knowledge-based
industries are an area where the country can develop a competitive edge.
With this view, the Philippines has adopted IT21 as its
vision to guide I.T. development in the country over the next 7-15 years. Its
overall goal: to transform the Philippines into a Knowledge Center in Asia.
Our Vision: IT21
By the turn of the 21st century, the Philippines
will have laid the infrastructure for every business, every agency of government, every
school, and every home in the Philippines to have access to information technology.
By the year 2005, I.T. use will be pervasive in daily
life. Philippine companies will be producing competitive I.T. products for world
markets.
Within the first decade of the 21st Century, the
Philippines will be a Knowledge Center in the Asia-Pacific: the leader in I.T. education,
in I.T.-assisted training, and in the application of information and knowledge to
business, professional services, and the arts.
Our Goal: the Philippines as Knowledge Center of Asia
In the State of the Nation Address of his final year in
office, President Fidel V. Ramos spoke before the Third Session of the Tenth Congress of
the Republic of the Philippines. He talked about the national pole-vaulting agenda, and
implicitly enunciated the goals of IT21.
Telecommunications
... we should be accelerating the development of our
information infrastructure.... If we get these things done, the distances separating our
7,100 islands will compress dramatically in the mind - as we build virtual bridges over
the waters, across the air and into cyber-space.
Telecommunications will provide the infrastructure for
interconnection and networking throughout the Philippine archipelago.
Industry
... we aim to turn the Philippines into an Asian hub of
software development and training.
Private industry will adopt I.T. solutions for
competitiveness and develop a global niche for Philippine I.T. products and services.
Government
We must improve government's capacity and efficiency across
the board - in its every aspect and from top to bottom. The bureaucracy we must further
professionalize and local government units we must begin to use as strategic partners in
development.
Government will adopt "best practice" I.T. in
governance and spur the growth of the Philippine I.T. industry by efficient outsourcing
for public projects.
Education
We must make more intensive investments in ... our
``dual-training'' systems, ``remote'' educational institutions and ``open'' universities.
We must make our schools not only communities of learners -
where our children learn to read, write, compute. We must make them schools of the future
- which nurture young Filipinos to become responsible citizens and enlightened leaders of
our country.
Public and private education and training institutions
will adopt I.T. in education and develop a critical mass of I.T. professionals and an
I.T.-literate workforce
Research and Development
We must build in this country the constellation of skills -
the education, research and development, the work ethic, the entire infrastructure of
knowledge - that will enable us to develop technological leadership.
Local R&D will upgrade available I.T. resources
through focused technology sourcing, adaptation, and dissemination.
Support Structures
We must work hard to win our place in the world - because
the world will not stop for those who stand idly by on the roadside of development.
The next 10-15 years will be crucial .... We must learn to
plan and prepare .... We must learn to look to what the world - the region - and the
Philippines - would be like ... over the next 10-15 years.
The policies, programs, institutions and general
culture that will bring about our goal of becoming a knowledge center in Asia will be
provided through the coordination and collaboration of all the stakeholders in the
development of I.T. in the Philippines.
Realizing our goal will require close cooperation
between government at all levels, with local and international business, the academic and
science and technology communities, civil society, and international institutions.
Part 2
Situating I.T. in the Philippines
Information Technology or I.T. is the collective term
for the various technologies involved in processing and transmitting information, which
include computing, multimedia, telecommunications, microelectronics, and their
interdependencies. Also called "informatics" or "telematics", the term
I.T. now more often refers to the convergence of various information-based, broadcast, and
mass media communication technologies.
The Global Picture
The worldwide I.T. and electronics industry is centered
around computers, communications, software and related services. The I.T. and related
electronics markets represent the largest non-agricultural economic activity, and the
fastest-growing business, in the world. Worldwide spending on I.T. products and services
will rise 12 percent to reach $683 billion in 1997. PC shipments in the US are expected to
grow 15 percent, with annual growth rates over the next five years of 11 percent.
The Internet explosion and the growing home market are
boosting I.T. sales. There were 31 million users connected to the Internet by end of 1996,
and more than 150 million are expected by the year 2000. The number of servers will grow
to five million by the year 2000. The bulk of these users and networks will be in Asia.
I.T. is increasingly a concern of multilateral policy
agreements, particularly within the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) within
the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the Framework Agreement within the ASEAN for
expanding intra-regional trade in services. I.T. permeated the various trade and
investment liberalization and facilitation initiatives, as well as economic and technical
cooperation, within Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation during the Manila-Subic ministerial
and leaders meetings in 1996. Policy initiatives in electronic commerce are being
fast-tracked in the United States and the European Union.
Developments in Southeast Asia
The market for PCs in the Asia-Pacific region grew by
32 percent in 1996, with a particular strong showing in notebooks and server sales. The
growth of the Asia-Pacific PC market is projected to continue over the next five years,
with a combined annual growth rate of 20 percent. In almost all the Southeast Asian
nations, I.T. and telecommunications are increasingly being used as critical instruments
of national and regional development. I.T.-related plans and policies are being used as
means for enhancing competitiveness and for realizing international cooperation and
coherence within the region.
Table 1. Asia-Pacific PC Shipments by country of origin
COUNTRY |
1996 |
1995 |
GROWTH |
Japan |
8,099,200 |
5,822,000 |
39.1 |
China |
2,108,240 |
1,518,002 |
38.9 |
Korea |
1,973,943 |
1,514,032 |
30.4 |
Australia |
1,393,939 |
1,214,740 |
14.8 |
Taiwan |
525,008 |
421,385 |
24.6 |
India |
447,132 |
350,386 |
27.6 |
Indonesia |
420,846 |
332,046 |
26.7 |
Hong
Kong |
342,513 |
309,148 |
10.8 |
Thailand |
321,782 |
269,505 |
19.4 |
Malaysia |
328,197 |
254,456 |
29.0 |
Singapore |
306,236 |
250,508 |
22.2 |
New
Zealand |
195,702 |
203,337 |
-3.8 |
Philippines |
187,754 |
138,018 |
36.0 |
Rest
of Asia Pacific |
329,999 |
254,001 |
29.9 |
TOTAL |
16,980,490 |
12,851,564 |
32.1 |
Source: IDC
The Philippine Situation
The principal strengths of the Philippine I.T. industry
include a well-educated, price-competitive labor force, English proficiency, growing track
record of successful I.T. work, fast-growing telecom infrastructure, government interest
in the industry, less regulation than some neighbors, good capabilities for dealing with
foreign partners, and strong entrepreneurship. Its weaknesses include a scarcity of middle
to high-end I.T. personnel trained and experienced enough for international projects,
insufficient cooperation within the industry, weak IPR enforcement, difficulties marketing
the nation and the industry, capital cost and scarcity, small-scale nature of
entrepreneurship, small domestic market, insufficient I.T. education, and insufficient
institutional cooperation and planning.
Yet, there are missing elements for integrated I.T.
diffusion in the Philippines, compared to other countries:
- improved access to I.T. technology and know-how from other
countries across industries
- preferential treatment of advanced local users in learning
from foreign firms
- more integrated approaches to national strategies for I.T.
diffusion -- e.g., pace setting activities in cost-sharing, government-industry
partnerships, and I.T. consultancies
- user-oriented I.T. strategy to encourage building a critical
mass of local I.T. firms
- support to creating world-class managerial skills in
information management and organization
In spite of these shortcomings, the outlook on the
Philippine I.T. sector remains bullish, largely because of the recent sustained growth of
the Philippine economy. Increased I.T. spending and revenues are projected as more
companies begin to implement cutting-edge technologies such as Intranets and data
warehousing. A survey among IS managers revealed plans of increasing their I.T. budgets
from 10 to 50 percent in 1997. The Internet, with its potential to change the way business
is done, .is a major source of optimism among vendors. The continuing liberalization of
key industries is giving a big boost to I.T. projects, increasing demand and competition
particularly from multinational companies. Despite keener competition, the countrys
Top 350 I.T. companies posted net sales of P89 billion in 1995, up by 33 percent from
1994. Reported net sales of the Top 200 I.T. companies in the Philippines reached P135
billion in 1996.
Table 2. Net Sales of the Top 350 I.T. companies, By
sector, 1994-95
SECTOR |
1995 |
1994 |
%
CHANGE |
Hardware |
7,800,458 |
5,559,357 |
40 |
Software |
1,401,254 |
838,086 |
67 |
Computer
Peripherals |
15,274,284 |
10,134,188 |
51 |
Computer
Accessories and Supplies |
3,245,984 |
1,784,566 |
82 |
Computer
Services |
3,287,344 |
2,431,626 |
35 |
Networking/Online
Services |
39,025 |
19,206 |
103 |
Other
Office/Business Machines |
2,527,670 |
1,887,910 |
34 |
Telecommunications
Services |
39,998,002 |
32,139,721 |
24 |
Telecommunication
Equipment and Accessories |
15,579,127 |
12,233,523 |
27 |
TOTAL |
89,153,148 |
67,028,523 |
33 |
Source: I.T. Resource 1996-1997
Investments continue to pour in. Intel has been
investing between $300 and $400 million in local manufacturing facilities over the last
2-3 years. Seagate is expanding its recording head manufacturing facility in the
Philippines, with 1996 investments of nearly $300 million. Fujitsu inaugurated a hard disk
manufacturing plant in Canlubang, with total investments expected to hit $300 million.
Apple Computers opened a full subsidiary. NEC will build a board wiring plant in Laguna,
Acer is building additional facilities in Subic, and Cypress Semiconductor is investing
$110 million in a new assembly and test plant in the country. In I.T. services, James
Martin doubled in size, NCR SW developed bank branch tellering applications, and Platinum
Technology established a local office to increase technology support.
Globally, competition in electronics has shifted away from
final assemblers and vertical control to "open-but-owned" systems, with standard
owners going after a growing installed base of customers. Turnkey contractors have been
vertically integrating to process R&D, design for manufacturability, product-specific
process development and documentation, various forms of testing, final product assembly,
final packaging, software loading and document duplication, and direct shipping to
distribution. The fastest-growing contractors have specialized in newer processes such as
surface mount technology (SMT) which drive product miniaturization and performance
forward. Increased outsourcing has created an unprecedented boom in the revenues of
contract manufacturers. Over the 1992-95 period, annual revenue growth was 46 percent, and
even larger growth is foreseen. These are opportunities yet to be tapped by the
Philippines.
Telecommunications
The deregulation of the countrys
telecommunications industry paved the way for a hefty buildup in investments in this
sector, estimated to total P130 billion over the next three years. The total number of
main telephone lines in the country climbed from only 785,000 in 1993 to 3.353 million as
of end 1996. Expansion is projected to remain strong at 72 percent in 1997 and decelerate
to 21 percent in 1998 when the telcos will have fulfilled their commitments in terms of
telephone lines they have to put up.
Table 3. Number of Telephone Lines Installed and Telephone
Density Index, 1989-1998
Year |
No.
of Main Lines |
Telephone
Density (per 100 people) |
1989 |
506,527 |
0.86 |
1990 |
549,159 |
0.91 |
1991 |
583,594 |
0.95 |
1992 |
740,033 |
1.17 |
1993 |
784,719 |
1.21 |
1994 |
1,109,652 |
1.67 |
1995 |
1,409,639 |
2.01 |
1996 |
3,352,842 |
4.66 |
1997 |
6,108,006 |
8.31 |
1998 |
7,347,664 |
9.78 |
Note: 1996 figure is based on carriers'
reports and population of 71,899,000. Subsequent figures are based on Carriers' submitted
rollout plans.
Source: National Telecommunications Commission
Telephone density per 100 people improved from 1.21 in
1993 to 4.66 in 1996. The number of public calling centers increased from 171 in 1992 to
728 in 1997. By 1998, a telephone density of 9.78. is expected. The percentage of all
cities / municipalities served nationwide climbed from 21 percent in 1992 to 27 percent in
1996. By 1998, about 87 percent of all regions will be serviced by telephones.
Agila II was launched in August 1997, with a reach covering
all Southeast Asian countries and some parts of China and Japan. It further expands local
telecommunications and broadcast infrastructure without depending on foreign-owned
satellite facilities.
Table 4. Comparative Telephone Densities (Telephones
per 100 persons): Philippines and Other Asian Countries
Country |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
Philippines |
1.17 |
1.21 |
1.67 |
2.01 |
5.20 |
Indonesia |
0.98 |
1.18 |
1.81 |
1.13 |
1.59 |
Korea |
41.80 |
45.90 |
42.26 |
39.70 |
41.50 |
Malaysia |
11.24 |
12.65 |
11.20 |
15.80 |
15.80 |
Thailand |
3.10 |
3.73 |
4.50 |
5.93 |
7.41 |
Source: APT 1995, 1996 and 1997 Yearbook
Four telecommunication bills were pending in Congress:
- Proposed Reorganization of the National Telecommunications
Commission (NTC)
- Cable Television Rationalization Bill
- Anti-Telecom Fraud Bill
- Arbitrary Resistance to Interconnection which seeks to
criminalize the refusal of a company to interconnect
The number of Philippine ISPs increased from 19 in 1995 to
88 in 1996, and to over 160 by the end of 1997. More ISPs are expanding their services to
include content provision as well. WebQuest launched the Internet aXess card to provide
telephone services over the Internet. The first Philippine Internet Exchange (PhIX) was
launched in July 1997. PhIX is a network access point that allows ISPs to exchange local
Internet traffic within the Philippines without having to connect to host servers
overseas. The PhIX was established by PLDT and interconnects Infocom, Iphil, Mozcom,
Virtualink and Worldtel. The number of regular Internet users was estimated at 84,500 in
1997.
Table 5. Telephone Services Across Regions, 1996
|
% of Cities/Municipalities Served |
Region |
1992 |
1996 |
1998 |
1 |
38 |
58 |
82 |
2 |
23 |
32 |
43 |
3 |
43 |
55 |
95 |
4 |
24 |
34 |
59 |
5 |
11 |
28 |
100 |
6 |
15 |
23 |
100 |
7 |
8 |
17 |
93 |
8 |
8 |
9 |
98 |
9 |
6 |
10 |
87 |
10 |
11 |
18 |
97 |
11 |
13 |
22 |
100 |
12 |
5 |
17 |
100 |
NCR |
100 |
100 |
100 |
CAR |
0 |
12 |
47 |
ARMM |
0 |
2 |
68 |
TOTAL |
21 |
27 |
83 |
ZOPAD |
7 |
12 |
68 |
Source: NTC
Industry
The banking industry is one of the Philippine pioneers
in I.T. use. Megalink operated the first shared network of automated teller machines
(ATMs) and was the first switch company to undertake ISO 9000 certification. EDInet
Philippines Inc., a company jointly owned by Ayala Corp. and Singapore Network Services
Private Limited, is pioneering applications of electronic data interchange (EDI). Among
other I.T. projects in banking:
- Philippine Dealing System (PDS), an electronic off-floor
foreign exchange trading system that has been in place since August 1992
- Philippine Domestic Dollar Transfer System (PDDTS), a
vehicle and electronic facility to handle and monitor bookkeeping claims to US dollars
being traded among participating banks.
- Project Abstract Secure (PAS), a functional collaboration
between the Bureau of Customs (BOC) and the BAP where an electronic system has been put in
place to verify the proper payment of customs duties/taxes and to remit payments
electronically through the banks.
The Philippine Stock Exchange set up an electronic trading
system in 1994, and provided the investing public with access to market information during
trading by using investor terminals located at the public galleries. An electronic link-up
with the Securities and Exchange Commission started in 1996. A paperless trading system
was introduced in 1997, with the settlement and clearing of transactions using
certificates replaced by a book-entry system of transferring ownership for equities and
lodging the certificates in a central repository. A clearing facility is being built to
supplement the central depository.
The Philippine electronics industry is the countrys
major export winner. The industry is export-oriented, essentially engaged in assembly
manufacturing and labor intensive activities, dominated by multinational corporations
(MNCs) such as Intel, Texas Instruments, Fujitsu, Matsushita, Toshiba and others.
The industry continues to post impressive growth in
investments, export earnings and job generation. Over the last five years, the industry
experienced an average yearly growth of 48 percent. Electronics industry exports reached
$10.6 billion in 1996 and represented over half the value of all Philippine exports. DTI
forecasts electronics exports to climb to $14 billion by 1997 and $18.55 billion by 1998.
Total industry employment was 38,000 in 1985, increasing to 69,000 in 1990 and 160,000 in
1996. Semiconductor companies employ more than 60 percent of the industrys total
workforce. Investments by the electronics industry have been increasing substantially,
from P1.5 billion in 1991, to P5.97 billion in 1993, to P55.57 B in 1995. Some 300
electronics firms are registered with the Board of Investments.
Table 6. Export performance of the Electronics Industry
Year |
Exports (US$B) |
Growth rate (%) |
Percent to RP
Exports |
1992 |
2.97 |
20 |
28 |
1993 |
3.78 |
27 |
33 |
1994 |
4.89 |
28 |
36 |
1995 |
7.55 |
55 |
43 |
1996 |
10.61 |
40 |
52 |
Source: DTI
The software and services subsector has also been a
consistent export winner, with export revenues reaching US $206 million in 1996, up by 51
percent from the US $125 million in 1995, which was a phenomenal increase from the $66
million in 1994. Target exports by year 2000 is US $300 million. Most of the
countrys software exporters only serve as subcontractors for bigger software
producers in other countries such as the United States. Given the export statistics,
Philippine market share is very minimal considering the size of the world market.
Worldwide I.T. industry revenues topped $1 trillion in 1996, with the US reporting $747
Billion or three fourth of the worldwide I.T. revenues for 1996. The figures represent
growth of 6.5 percent and 7.8 percent over 1995 figures, respectively. The world
software market was reported at $253.9 billion in 1996, up by a tenth from $230.8 billion
in 1995.
The "Year 2000" or "millennium bug"
problem opened up opportunities for Filipino programmers. The TLRC Data Center was
established inside the Clark Cyber City, in cooperation with a Canadian firm, to offer
code conversion solutions. Many of the companys programmers came from nearby
resettlement sites and were hired after a two-week training in code conversion. Government
is also working with local software consortia to train 100,000 programmers.
Locally, the Philippine PC market was upbeat in 1996. A
total of 187,768 units of PCs valued at $314.28 million were shipped to the country in
1996, a value that is 36 percent higher than that of 1995. PC growth will be driven
by the entry of newer Intel processors into the country. The government sector will be a
bigger market for PCs as it implements its computerization projects. Likewise the business
and home markets will continue to buy more PCs as prices continue to decline. There will
be a greater demand for branded computers as the price difference narrows down between
clones and branded units. The Philippine market for LANs, printers and multi-user systems
in 1996 also posted significant increases over their 1995 levels.
Government
Microcomputers constitute 99 percent of all computer
systems used in the national government, with 142 PCs per national government agency being
the average. Almost half of all PCs are found in government owned and controlled
corporations (GOCCs).
Out of the 1.2 million government employees, only 0.3
percent are I.T. personnel. Others are mainly I.T. technicians (researchers, computer/data
entry operators) and I.T. professionals (programmers, analysts, consultants), while 9
percent are I.T. managers. Since information systems planning was institutionalized in
government in 1989, more and more agencies have started to plan and implement a
computerization program. As of February 1996, 130 information system plans have been
evaluated and endorsed by NCC to DBM.
There is a marked increase in the number of major
computerization projects in government involving strategic and hightechnology
integrated solutions. Among them:
- electronic declaration of import entries and automatic
computation of duties and taxes at the Bureau of Customs, which has cut down the time for
release of cargo to only 4 hours from 4-6 days
- computerized motor vehicle registration, decentralized
production of driver license cards and vehicle plates, and a single ticketing office for
traffic violations at the Land Transportation Office
- mobile passport issuance services at the Department of
Foreign Affairs through provincial extension offices provided citizens with easier access
to international travel documents
- claims processing at the Government Service Insurance System
speeded up to 8 days from 60 days
- decentralization of Social Security System services through
a central computer linking some 100 branches allowed easier full service access to members
and their dependents
- computerized professional licensure examinations at the
Professional Regulations Commission allowed examination results to be issued within 5 days
instead of 7 months
- partial computerization of the civil registry at the
National Statistics Office allowed many certificates of birth to be retrieved on the same
day of application
- registration of securities at the Bureau of Treasury
provided an electronic system for recording and certifying transactions in government
securities
Among other strategic networks that government put in place
for cost-effective communication and information exchange were FINLINK at the Department
of Finance to facilitate information sharing with its major bureaus and other government
agencies; POWERNET at the Department of Energy; the LEDAC Network for the Legislative
Executive Development Advisory Council; the National Statistics Office QuickStats;
Economic Indicators Online (EIO) at the National Economic and Development Authority
website; FINLINK, a financial information system linking the key financial and revenue
institutions of the country; computerized voters list with the Commission of
Elections, tax computerization in the Bureau of Internal Revenue; computerized trade and
industry information services at the Department of Trade and Industry; national crime
information system at the Department of National Defense, entry and departure monitoring
at the Bureau of Immigration, and the "cyber city" established by the Office of
the President in Subic Bay to showcase I.T. applications in public services.
Government is also getting wired. As of October 1997, there were over 100 government
agencies connected to the Internet, with most of them having their own websites featuring
information on their key programs and activities.
The governments budget for I.T. spending is
increasing: the national government has an average annual operating budget on I.T. of P643
million. P7 billion worth of I.T. assets have been invested by the national government for
the past five years; about P21 billion is expected to be invested in the next five
years. An increasing number of local government units (LGUs) have started using
I.T., especially for revenue-generating operations: business permits and licenses, tax
administration, real property taxes, and the Civil Registry System. The Local Government
Computerization Program (LGCP), the master plan for the use of I.T. in local area
development has been completed.
Education
Quality and expertise continue to distinguish the
Filipino I.T. professional. Filipinos find it easy working on legacy applications
as well as fourth generation languages. Over 3,000 Filipinos are adept with mainframes,
and more than 5,000 are experienced in minicomputer operations. Filipino
microcomputer professionals have experience with connectivity and data communications
through Local Area Networks (LAN) and micro-mainframe links.
Computer schools and training centers continue to grow,
adding to revenues in the services sector. In 1996, there were about 200 training
centers offering short-term computer courses, while 30 colleges and universities offer
degree programs in computer science and engineering. The number of computer schools,
colleges and training centers increased to 357 in 1997. The Philippines is the second
among Asian countries in terms of the largest number of training facilities for computer
programming and computer-related courses.
I.T. enrollment is on the rise. The number of students who
enrolled in I.T. courses during the school year 1995-96 rose 28 percent to reach 117,799
from 91,829 enrollees in the previous year. I.T. graduates numbered 14,944 in school year
1995-96, up by 29 percent from 11,598 reported in 1995. Of the total I.T. enrollment, 76.4
percent were enrolled in Computer Science, the most popular I.T. course. In terms of
regional distribution, the NCR accounted for 42,178 of all I.T. students, followed by
Central Visayas with 16,841 and the Southern Tagalog region with 11,081 enrollees.
A P375 million DECS Modernization Program is currently
being implemented to upgrade student competency and educational management through
computers. A Center for Education and Technology was established last June 1997, featuring
a mini school of the future and a showroom. A program to computerize 97 SUCs and 168
private schools all over the country was launched in May 1997, with a P300 million budget
for the acquisition of computer hardware, software and training. The use of I.T. to
improve teaching, learning, and educational management in basic education was introduced
through "Schools of the Future" equipped with multimedia facilities, with the
first opened in Camarines Sur in April 1997.
There are about 8,000 libraries in the Philippines, broken
down into 1,755 academic 566 public libraries, 5,516 school libraries, and 267 special
libraries. Only about 500 use computers in their operations, with the latest trends being
the use of CD-ROMs and linking to the Internet via an ISP. Seven libraries in the
DOST-ESEP project have interconnected their catalogs and allow access through the
Internet. At least seven other libraries outside the DOST-ESEP network have integrated and
automated library systems, two of them using software developed in-house. There are at
least 4 library networks (i.e., libraries which have grouped together for the purposes of
information sharing) which are considering such interconnections. The National Library and
the Philippine Library Association, Inc. are currently putting together a National
Information Development Plan.
Research and Development
R&D expenditures, of which 60 percent comes from
government, have remained very low. In 1992, R & D expenditures were estimated at P1.5
billion representing only 0.22 percent of GNP; newly industrializing countries spend 1.5
percent of their GNP on R&D.
The country does not have the critical mass of scientists
and engineers required to industrialize. The current ratio of 155 scientists and engineers
per million population is way below the UNESCO norm of 380 for industrializing countries.
The country has very few R&D institutions of international caliber. Support to these
institutions is being provided by the government with very minimal contribution from the
private sector.
Most of the technologies being used in the country are
imported. This is shown by the number of patents granted to foreigners. Of the 19,404
patents granted for the period 1985-1994, 14,164 or 73 percent are foreign owned. During
the period 1979-1993, there were 1,504 technology transfer agreements (TTA) with foreign
technology suppliers.
Presently, various electronic information networks are
encouraging greater inter-action within the countrys S&T community: the Science
Academe and Research Network (SARNET) which aims to connect to the Net the 2,000 tertiary
and secondary schools all over the Philippines; the Science and Technology Education
Network (STEDNET); and the Health R&D Information Network (HERDIN). DOST also put
online the S&T Infoweb, an information service which provides a single interface
between the Internet and the wealth of databases available from the agency.
Support Structures
In July 1994, President Fidel V. Ramos approved the
National Information Technology Plan. The NITC was constituted to oversee the
implementation of the Plan, now IT21, the countrys blueprint for I.T. development.
The government, with the support of the private sector,
successfully launched and completed the 1st nationwide search for I.T. excellence last
year to encourage the development of world-class I.T. products and services. Just
recently, the 2nd nationwide search was launched.
The Intellectual Property Rights Code, Republic Act No.
8293, seeks to impose stiffer penalties and fines for the manufacture, distribution and
use of unlicensed software. It was passed into law on June 6, 1997, and takes effect on
January 1, 1998.
The country supports the Information Technology Agreement
(ITA) which seeks a multilateral elimination of tariffs on information technology by the
year 2000. The Philippines has already reduced to 3 percent the duties on selected I.T.
products under Executive Orders numbered 264 and 288 starting 1995 up to the year 2000. A
uniform duty of 5 percent is targeted by the year 2004.
House Resolution 890, sponsored by Rep. Leandro B.
Verceles, Jr., calls for the interconnection of local Internet service providers into one
Internet exchange. This exchange, to be otherwise known as the RPWEB will electronically
link up via the Internet the entire government organization. On November 7, 1997, the
President issued Administrative Order No. 332 adopting and promulgating the RPWEB as the
nucleus of the Philippine Information Infrastructure (PII) and directing all government
agencies down to the local and field levels to inter-connect through the Internet.
Soon after the approval of IT21 on 28 October 1997, in a
visit to the United States, President Ramos met with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and
concluded four (4) Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) where Microsoft agreed: to explore
the possibility of cooperation in the area of I.T. core competency and information
infrastructure development; to jointly undertake specific projects and activities
described in IT21 such as the establishment of interconnected learning centers, as well as
to explore such other cooperation possibilities as in the development of advanced
software; to provide technical assistance in translating electronic commerce initiatives
into technology applications; and to provide technical assistance, training and
administrative support as may be agreed for the implementation of a software management
and review program to sustain the software legalization process in government.
Also during the same US visit, the President witnessed the
signing of an MOU between Oracle chairman and chief executive officer Lawrence Ellison and
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Foundation of the Philippines chairman Roberto R.
Romulo, which makes the Philippines the first international participant to the US$50
million Oracle Academic Initiative (OAI). Under the agreement, Oracle will extent a US$1.5
million grant to the APEC Foundation to finance the training of young Filipinos in
computer software applications, which gives a big boost to the government's I.T. skills
and training program.
Part 3
Our Strategy and Action Agenda
The Philippines has adopted a strategy of pole-vaulting
the economy into the 21st century and the Third Millennium. It brings forth a vision of a
nation striving to become the best it can be: working faster, setting higher goals, making
society and the economy stronger. The pole-vaulting strategy will double per capita
income of Filipinos and achieve full NIC-hood for the Philippines by the year 2002.
Inflation shall be brought down to an annual average of 3 percent, unemployment to 3-4
percent, and poverty incidence to 20 percent.
I.T. is an essential tool for this pole-vaulting
strategy. It provides both the infrastructure for competitiveness, and a dynamic industry
that will itself be globally competitive.
Phases of Our I.T. Development
I.T. in the Philippines will develop in phases.
The scattered gains made these past years shall be
consolidated, and provided a new impetus. Access to information technology for all shall
be achieved by the year 2000. The telecommunications roll-out program and the framework
for the Philippine Information Infrastructure (PII) will be completed while the industry
will be pump-primed by government outsourcing for public I.T. projects. The appropriate
policy and institutional frameworks for effective cooperation between government and
industry groupings will be put in place. Government will extend support to local industry
for their marketing, financing, R&D, and manpower requirements as the latter seeks its
global niches.
As I.T. activities become more focused on the nations
competencies and more pervasive throughout the archipelago, government will turn over the
lead role in I.T. development to the private sector. By the year 2005, private business
will have moved into its global product and service niches and built up the countrys
momentum towards sustained growth in these areas. Particular niches in education and
training are expected. The efforts of private business will be supported by continuing
high levels of growth in telecommunications, the diffusion of I.T. use throughout
industry, and the effective use of I.T. in governance.
Within the first decade of the next century, IT21 will
realize its vision of the Philippines as a Knowledge Center in Asia.
Our I.T. Development Strategy
IT21 relies on government and private industry playing
lead roles in pushing forward I.T. use and I.T. production in the country.
The role of government as in Philippine I.T. development is
defined as that of enabler, lead user, and partner of the private
sector. As enabler, the government will provide the national information
infrastructure and the policy, program and institutional environment that will encourage
the growth of I.T. use and the I.T. industry in the country. As lead user, the
government will implement leading edge I.T. applications and provide examples of
"best practice" in the use of I.T. for the delivery of government services. As partner
of the private sector, the government will undertake key I.T. projects for participation
and implementation by business, the academe, the science and technology community, and
civil society.
As private business is spurred by government actions, it
will seek its global competitive niches and develop the Philippines as a highly
competitive production platform for global electronics and I.T.-related industries in the
Asia-Pacific. In the short-term, they must seize local and overseas market opportunities
in solutions to the Year 2000 (Y2K) problem, popularly known as the "millennium
bug", in Internet/intranet/WWW applications, and in outsourcing by the Philippine
government for its I.T. development projects. Over the medium to long-term, the I.T.
industry should develop strategic partnerships for turnkey production and the development
of I.T.-assisted education materials logical niches for Philippine industry. All
throughout, they must collaborate closer among themselves and with other stakeholders in
I.T. development in the Philippines to advocate for whatever policy, program and
institutional reforms may be necessary, and to improve service delivery, marketing, and
R&D through common efforts.
Those involved in telecommunications, education and R&D
will each play their own supportive roles telecommunications for the physical
infrastructure, education for the adequate preparation of the labor force, the R&D
community for developing local products and applications, and for adapting technology
sourced overseas to Philippine conditions as well as act in a broader capacity as
government or private business.
All stakeholders, together, shall communicate and advocate
about the importance of I.T. for Philippine development. They shall help foster an I.T.
culture among all Filipinos.
Our Action Agenda
This summary listing of policies and programs is
divided into the three phases of IT21. A more detailed listing is provided for the first
phase, while indicative thrusts are given for the succeeding phases. This document will be
continuously updated to keep pace with developments in markets and technology.
Phase I. Providing the Impetus
By the year 2000, the Philippines will have laid the
infrastructure for every business, every agency of government, every school, and every
home in the Philippines to have access to information technology.
A. Provide the Policy Environment
1. Adopt and implement policies to promote increased
investments in I.T. and related electronics industries e.g., through strategic
partnerships, venture capital.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Promulgate
administrative/legislative measures to promote wider private sector participation in
venture capital financing to expand the capital base for I.T. R&D and other
I.T.-related development ventures |
1997 1998 |
DTI-BOI, DOF, PCCI |
| Adopt measures to promote
strategic partnerships and alliances by local companies/institutions with leading
international R&D institutions, technology providers, developers, and manufacturers |
1997 1998 |
DTI-BOI, DFA, DOST, ITFP |
| Promote private sector
investments in product- and location-specific I.T. projects |
1997 1998 |
DTI-BOI, PEZA |
| Promote technological
innovation and experimentation by creating new products, services and applications |
1997 1998 |
DOST, DTI, ITFP-PSA |
| Focus R&D on high-value
added I.T. products and services as well as on product creation/design and improvement in
high growth sectors such as telecommunications, software development (information systems,
common application packages, educational/courseware packages, multimedia applications,
computer animation, promotional packages, public information, news materials, multimedia),
telemedicine, e-commerce, etc. |
1997 2005 |
DOST, DTI-BOI, PETEF, ITFP-PSA |
2. Adopt more investor-friendly policies, systems and
procedures in government.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Fast-track
legislation/adoption of administrative measures to further liberalize foreign investment |
1997 1998 |
DTI-BOI, DOF |
| Establish fast lane services
for foreign investors/businessmen at ports of entry and when transacting business with
government to create investor-friendly environment |
1997 1998 |
DOTC, DTI, DOF |
| Organize task force on
monitoring and public accountability aimed at making the administrative and policy
environment for more conducive for investing and doing business in the Philippines |
1997 1998 |
DTI |
3. Implement Philippine commitments to international
agreements that affect the I.T. sector favorably e.g., the I.T. Agreement (ITA).
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Implement Philippine
commitment to the I.T. Agreement (ITA) based on the tariff phase-out schedule submitted in
Geneva on 25 April 1997 |
1997 2000 |
DTI, ITFP |
4. Adopt administrative measures to effectively enforce the
laws on intellectual property rights (IPR), particularly as they affect I.T. products and
services.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Adopt administrative measures
to implement the intellectual property rights (IPR) law, particularly on I.T. products and
services |
1997 1998 |
DTI, ITFP |
5. Rationalize and coordinate development of technoparks
and cybercities throughout the country for greater complementarity in investments and
infrastructure development.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Develop a master plan for
technopark and cyber city development |
1997 1999 |
DOTC, DOST, DTI |
| Network technoparks and cyber
cities with educational and R&D institutions and organizations through high bandwidth
telecommunications facilities |
1997 2000 |
DOTC, DTI |
B. Enhance the Physical Infrastructure
1. Accelerate universal access (i.e. making
telecommunications services accessible and affordable to all) by completing
telecommunications programs, especially in underserved areas.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Complete the roll-out programs
of the telecommunications providers, especially in underserved areas |
1997 1998 |
DOTC, NTC |
| Complete the Municipal
Telephone Program |
1997 1998 |
DOTC |
| Complete the establishment of
the telecommunications backbone through the interconnectivity of the various Philippine
telecommunications providers |
1997 1998 |
DOTC |
2. Fast-track the formulation and implementation of the
Philippine Information Infrastructure (PII).
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Accelerate government
interconnectivity, information sharing, and communication via the Internet, with the RPWEB
as the Philippine Intranet |
1997 1998 |
DOTC, DOST, PMS |
| Organize task forces to
identify, develop, and publish in the Internet sectoral/department/agency homepages to
facilitate wider public access to information on key governmental policies, programs, and
services |
1997 1998 |
NCC |
| Adopt measures to encourage
wider use and development of value-added services and networks (e.g. e-commerce, EDI,
electronic libraries, telemedicine, private and government networks, ATMs, public
information kiosks, life-long learning, law enforcement and public safety, interactive
access to government services, electronic government, and the like) |
1998 2000 |
DOTC, PCCI, ITFP |
3. Intensify investment promotion in the telecommunications
industry.
4. Formulate appropriate cyber laws in the use of networks,
particularly the Internet, to ensure information security and network reliability.
5. Promote telecommuting/teleworking, particularly in
software development and multimedia production.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Intensify investment promotion
in the telecommunications industry |
1997 1998 |
DTI-BOI, DOTC |
| Formulate appropriate cyber
laws in the use of networks, particularly the Internet, to ensure information security and
network reliability |
1997 2000 |
DOTC, DOST |
| Promote
telecommuting/teleworking, particularly in software development and multimedia production |
1998 |
DOTC, ITFP-PSA, NCC |
C. Develop the I.T. Manpower Base
1. Produce critical mass of I.T. professionals and
I.T.-literate manpower, including competent I.T. educators and teachers at all levels.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Incorporate I.T. in the
primary, secondary, and tertiary curricula |
1997 2000 |
DECS, CHED, TESDA, DOST |
| Implement
I.T.-based/computer-aided learning in basic education, including the pre-schools |
1997 2000 |
DECS |
| Upgrade competencies of
educational/training institutions with I.T.-based tools and programs |
1997 2000 |
DOST, DECS, CHED |
| Re-orient engineering and
other I.T.-related courseware toward greater responsiveness to industry needs |
1997 2000 |
CHED, DTI, DOST, ITFP, PCCI |
| Develop instructional/learning
materials especially in the sciences and engineering, math and technology |
1997 2000 |
CHED, DECS, DOST |
2. Designate from among I.T. training institutions,
universities or colleges I.T. Centers of Excellence as a form of recognition and reward.
3. Organize a nationwide network of Core Competency
Institutions in I.T., in partnership with local and international development institutions
and business organizations.
4. Conduct continuing I.T. education for teachers/trainors,
I.T. practitioners and workers.
5. Adopt dual-tech approach in I.T. education and training.
6. Establish high-quality distance education and learning.
7. Develop and implement life-long learning through the
Internet.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Select/Designate from among
I.T. training institutions, universities or colleges I.T. Centers of Excellence as a form
of reward/recognition . Funding support for expanded training facilities and operations go
with the award. |
1997 2000 |
DOST, CHED, DECS, TESDA |
| Organize a nationwide network
of Core Competency Institutions in I.T., in partnership with local and international
development institutions and business organizations, with the Philippine Software
Development Institute (PSDI) as the National Core Competency Center. |
1997 2005 |
DOST, CHED, DFA, DTI |
| Conduct continuing I.T.
education for teachers/trainors, I.T. practitioners and workers |
1997 2000 |
CHED, DECS |
| Adopt dual-tech approach in
I.T. education and training |
1997 2005 |
CHED, DTI |
| Establish high-quality
distance education and learning. |
1997 2005 |
CHED, DECS |
| Develop and implement
life-long learning through the Internet |
1997 2005 |
DOST, DOTC |
D. Pump-Prime I.T. Industry Development
1. Implement a government-wide computerization program,
with emphasis on the development and deployment of front-line, mission-critical and common
application information systems
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Fast-track the development and
implementation of information systems for government frontline services such as civil,
vehicle, land registration, licensing, health and other social services, etc. |
1997 2000 |
PMS, DBM, NCC |
| Develop and implement
government mission critical information systems such as planning, budget management,
execution and accountability, investment programming tax administration, revenue
collection, justice administration, public safety, environment preservation, labor and
employment, etc. |
1998 2001 |
DBM, NCC, PMS |
| Standardize and deploy common
application information systems in government, including the local government units |
1997 2002 |
DBM, DILG, PMS, NCC |
2. Implement the RPWEB to interconnect all government
offices and units through any Internet Service Provider (ISP) in their area, to
interconnect all ISPs through Internet exchanges.
3. Organize and monitor government and business response to
the Year 2000 (Y2K) problem and opportunity.
4. Set up an I.T. Development Fund or other appropriate
financing scheme for outsourcing information system development and deployment in
government.
5. Promote technological innovation and experimentation by
creating new products, services and applications, and developing value-added services and
networks.
6. Provide appropriate financing support to allow active
participation by the private sector in R&D and in the development and the incubation
of new products and solutions.
7. Fast-track measures to streamline administrative
processes and procedures in government procurement, budgeting, accounting, auditing,
monitoring, reporting, etc.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Implement the RPWEB to (a)
interconnect all government offices and units, including schools, colleges and
universities, government corporations, as well as those at the local level, by authorizing
the use of savings for Internet access, through any Internet service provider (ISP) in
their area, to facilitate faster communication and data interchange in government; (2)
interconnect all ISPs through Internet exchanges for greater connectivity among users in
the country; and (3) speed up implementation of the telephone roll-out programs,
particularly in unserved and underserved areas in the country |
1997 1998 |
DOTC, DBM, PMS, NCC |
| Organize and monitor
government and business response to the Year 2000 (Y2K) problem, including government
sector participation in marketing programs/trade shows for Philippine developed software
solutions |
1997 1999 |
DTI, DOST, NCC |
| Set up an I.T. Development
Fund or other appropriate financing scheme for outsourcing IS development and deployment
for mission-critical and common application systems for government, including the local
government units (e.g. procurement and accounting systems, financial management, budget
allocation, execution, and reporting systems, personnel and payroll systems, tax mapping,
land registration, valuation, and tax collection systems, civil, vehicle, and land
registry systems, etc.) |
1997 1998 |
DOST |
| Promote technological
innovation and experimentation by creating new products, services and applications, and
development of value-added services and networks (e.g. e-commerce, EDI, electronic
libraries, private and government networks, ATMs, public information kiosks, and the like) |
1997 2000 |
DOST, DTI, ITFP |
| Provide appropriate financing
scheme and/or set up government fund to allow active participation by the private sector
in R&D and in the development and incubation of new products and solutions to spur the
widespread use of I.T. both in government and in business |
1997 2000 |
DBM |
| Fast-track measures to
streamline administrative processes and procedures in government procurement, budgeting,
accounting, auditing, monitoring, reporting, etc. |
1997 2000 |
DBM |
E. Organize for Action: Institutional Reforms
1. Reorganize the NITC to broaden and strengthen
private sector involvement in IT development activities.
2. Constitute NITC task forces to carry out specific IT21
programs/actions.
3. Organize a 50-member private sector Advisory Council to
facilitate meaningful private sector participation in the implementation of IT21.
4. Strengthen the NCC to enable it to better carry out its
primary mandate of promoting widespread use of I.T. in government.
5. Create a comprehensive database management, monitoring
and benchmarking system for key I.T. indicators.
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Organize the
expanded/reorganized National Information Technology Council (or the National I.T. Board,
NITB) |
1997 1998 |
NITC |
| Constitute the NITC/NITB task
forces to carry out specific IT21 programs/actions |
1997 1998 |
NITC |
| Organize 50-member private
sector Advisory Council to facilitate meaningful private sector participation in the
implementation of the IT21. |
1997 1998 |
NITC, PMS |
| Strengthen/Re-engineer the NCC
as part of the newly created NITB to enable it to better carry out its primary mandate of
promoting widespread use of I.T. in government through the formulation of appropriate I.T.
policies and guidelines in the development of information systems and in acquiring I.T.
resources; providing technical assistance; and providing I.T. training to government |
1997 1998 |
NITC, DBM, PMS |
| Create comprehensive database
on I.T. and set up monitoring and benchmarking system for key I.T. indicators |
1997 1998 |
ITFP, DTI |
F. Marketing the National I.T. Plan for the 21st
Century (IT21)
1. Organize task forces to undertake a nationwide
communication and advocacy program, including focused I.T. trade missions and
international roadshows.
2. Develop, produce, and disseminate promotional materials
on IT21 and the Philippine I.T. Action Agenda
3. Create a Philippine web site promoting IT21 the I.T.
Action Agenda
Specific
Actions |
Time Frame |
Lead
Agency/Organization |
| Organize task forces to
undertake a nationwide communication and advocacy program, as well as extensive and more
focused I.T. trade missions and international road shows to promote the Philippines as
I.T. investment destination and Knowledge Center for Asia in the 21st
Century |
1997 2000 |
NITC, DTI, DFA |
| Develop, produce, disseminate
marketing/promotional materials on the IT21 and the I.T. Action Agenda |
1997 1998 |
DTI, DFA |
| Create the Philippine IT21 web
site |
1997 1998 |
NITC |
Phase II. Building Up Momentum
By the year 2005, I.T. use will be pervasive in daily life.
Philippine companies will be producing competitive I.T. products for world markets.
- Diffuse I.T. use (preferably using Philippine solutions)
throughout private industry
- Develop Philippine I.T. products and services for the local
and global markets.
- Highlight "best practices" in public service
delivery through the use of I.T. in governance
- Develop global competence in I.T. education and training
- Sustain high levels of growth in the telecommunications
sector
Phase III. Realizing Our Vision
Within the first decade of the 21st century, the
Philippines will be a Knowledge Center of the Asia-Pacific: the leader in I.T. education,
in I.T.-assisted training, and in the application of information and knowledge to
business, professional services, and the arts. More specifically, the following actions
shall be undertaken:
- Develop a global niche for Philippine I.T. and knowledge
products and services.
- Sustain I.T. innovation geared towards knowledge creation,
management and dissemination.
- Push for higher levels of growth for the Philippine I.T.
industry.
- Sustain the Philippines role as Knowledge Center in
Asia
- Highlight "best practices" in people empowerment
through the use of I.T. in governance
- Attain the goal of universal access for telecommunications.
By the first quarter of the 21st century, the
Philippines would have found its niche among the major knowledge centers of the world. It
would be a major player in the design and development of significant knowledge-based
products and services. Most if not all of government and private sector workplaces, homes
and schools will have access to the global information superhighway. Greater efficiency
and productivity in communications among various sectors would have been achieved through
the modernization of the country's telecommunications facilities and production tools. As
what the President said during his State of the Nation Address (SONA) on the Third Session
of the Tenth Congress on July 28, 1997,
This "survival-of-the-fittest'' socio-economic and
political order imposes severe penalties on the inefficient, the unskilled, the
non-productive, the timid- and the disunited. But great opportunities await the
intelligent, the self-disciplined, the innovative, and the daring.
This is what we must resolve to make our beloved
Philippines these next 10-15 years.
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