Jamaica has pledged to assist other Caricom member states in the development
of their e-readiness and e-governance programmes in an effort to help close
the gap in internet provision between the developed and developing world.
Having been ranked as the leading English-speaking Caribbean country in terms
of e-readiness by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) in its 2005 survey,
Caribbean Net News reports that Jamaica's relative expertise in the field is
now in demand from fellow Caricom members which failed to attain the same grade.
“At last week’s Ministerial CARICOM meeting of those responsible
for Telecommunications and Information Communication Technology (ICT), Jamaica
pledged to assist other countries in their development of e-readiness and e-governance
programmes,” explained Minister of Commerce, Science and Technology Phillip
Paulwell.
"Jamaica would seek to lessen the digital divide that now existed between
developed and developing states," he added.
To this end, the Jamaican authorities are already engaging in discussions with
their counterparts in Barbados and Trinidad & Tobago with a view to creating
a framework of cooperation that will spur the development of information technology
in those countries.
While Jamaica was ranked one of the more developed countries in the Caribbean
for e-readiness, the EIU survey placed it only 49th out of 65 participating
nations, with an overall score of 4.8 out of ten. Top of the survey was Denmark
(8.74), followed by the United States (8.73), Sweden (8.64), Switzerland (8.62),
and the United Kingdom (8.54).
The EIU arrives at its overall scores by assessing countries in six categories,
including: connectivity and technology infrastructure; business environment;
consumer and business adoption; legal and policy environment; social and cultural
environment; and supporting e-services.
Jamaica attained a score of 6.60 in the legal and policy environment - above
the world average score of 6.45 - but scored poorly for connectivity at 2.90
out of ten. However, Mr Paulwell stated that Jamaica was addressing this latter
failing with a "rapid deployment" of broadband technology across the
island over the next two months.