Measuring Impacts of Information and Communication Advances for Development in the 21st Century
Abstract
This paper explores why measuring the impacts of information and communication advances is important for
development in the 21st Century and why it is statistically challenging. Measuring impacts in any field is
difficult, but for ICT there are added complications because of its diversity and rapidly changing nature. A
number of impact areas are identified in this paper, and their relationships explored, in the context of their place
in the social, economic and environmental realms. The result is a complex web of relationships between
individual impact areas, such as economic growth and poverty alleviation, and background factors, such as a
country’s level of education and government regulation.
Existing measurement frameworks are described, and relevant statistical standards examined. The latter includes
internationally agreed standards for the ICT sector, ICT products and ICT demand. The contributions on
Measuring ICT for Development in the 21st Century and its member Organizations to ICT measurement, and its
goals for measuring ICT impacts are outlined.
Methodologies used in the measurement of ICT are discussed and compared in section two of this paper, and
empirical evidence reviewed, in section three. Most research conducted has found positive effects of ICT in the
impact areas investigated. However, research has tended to focus on positive, rather than negative impacts;
therefore, the latter tend to be indicated by unreliable evidence. There is relatively little evidence from
developing countries and there are indications that findings in respect of developed countries may not apply to
developing countries. In respect of both developed and developing countries, there are few studies that provide
internationally comparable evidence.
The difficulties of ICT impact measurement, major data gaps and the lack of clear statistical standards suggest
several issues for consideration. These are presented in the final section of the paper.
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