|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, January 09, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Southern States
| Previous
| Next
Govt. to utilise CII summit to woo investors
By W. Chadrakanth
HYDERABAD, JAN. 8. With the CII's Seventh Summit opening
tomorrow, the State Government is all set to market the State as
an IT-savvy place to promote itself as an industry-friendly
place.
The potential of electronic commerce has been rightly realised
and efforts are on to ``Catch One, Catch All'' as official
sources put it.
The basic thrust is to project the Government's image as a
people-friendly and eco-friendly one and its facilitator's job
that it envisages in the development as key to industrial
success.
The State Government's stand vis-a-vis IT is that the latter
would help in increasing the efficiency of the procurement system
and strengthening inventory control. Access to the Internet and
connectivity with increased bandwidth of all rural areas is part
of empowering the rural masses, it is being argued. It lowers
retail transaction costs and eliminates or transforms
intermediaries, the Government believes. Even the global economic
perspective of the World Bank holds similar views.
That the gap in Internet access between the industrial and
developing countries will persist through the next decade has
made the Government recognise and plan accordingly. Electronic
commerce in industrial countries has grown rapidly from next to
nothing in the mid-1990s to around 200 billion dollars in 2000, a
report prepared by the World Bank says.
The importance of e-commerce rests not in its current size but in
the likely speed of its establishment as a significant vehicle
for commerce and the potential for future growth. E-commerce is
likely to reach the levels of four trillion dollars to 6 trillion
dollars in the U.S. alone within the next four years.
And when it accounts for 25 per cent of the world trade by 2005
can any country afford to lag behind?
In all three areas of ``business to business, business to
consumer and business to business and consumer,'' the Government
wants to establish a lead in the country by an all out aggression
in the IT sector. The aim is not just to invite the ``Soft
People'' to settle in and around Cyberabad but to make e-
governance a 100 per cent reality where the farming, marketing,
health, education and service sectors are integrated.
While e-commerce may have its impact on many areas it can
certainly help farmers, particularly small farmers in remote
areas who could keep a tab on prices in the nearest market. This
means improving farmers' borrowing power.
But the other area that the Government is seriously interested in
developing is skilled labour.
A proposal to train youth and women in the IT field is under
contemplation, ``as a critical mass of skilled labour is
essential to supply the necessary applications, provide support
and disseminate relevant technical knowledge for electronic
commerce.''
Government support is already assured by its switching to online
services in some areas for its own transactions.
It may not be possible to achieve the IT dream unless the
Governments play a complementary role here and at the Centre. As
the survey points out, support to certification of firms by
providing information on certification procedures, promoting
access by domestic firms that provide certification, and perhaps
subsidising the costs of certification to demonstrate the kinds
of resources available in the domestic market are factors that
cannot be ignored.
A supportive legal framework for electronic transactions,
including recognition of digital signatures, legal admissibility
of electronic contracts and establishment of data storage
requirements in paper form, intellectual property rights for
digital content, liability of Internet service providers, privacy
of personal data and mechanisms for resolving disputes must be in
place.
Knowledgeable sources welcome the initiative of the AP Government
and hope the Government would work in the above direction too so
that it ``nets'' the big fish for the benefit of the marginalised
people too.
It may not bring connectivity to every household in the rural
areas but, certainly, kiosks established in every village could
bring people to the threshold of accessibility. Again increased
access to the Internet being only a cursory condition for
empowerment of people, many complementary services too are
required to be developed.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Southern States Previous : Homes for beggars planned Next : Krishna asks SPs to visit villages | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|