Q Isa Daudpota June 19, 2000
Tags: IT-revolution , economics
Pakistan can learn much from India’s progress in IT. For a start, it can pay attention to uplifting its education, and encourage ex-pat Pakistani to contribute to the new effort to re-vitalize science and technology in the country.
For the South Asian nerd growing up in the 60's and 70's, becoming a
scientist was the most he could desire. The more worldly-wise opted for the
safer, more lucrative careers in engineering and medicine, helped by gentle
parental persuasion or peer pressure. Since the PC
80's, the trend has changed dramatically; today most of the bright students
head for studies in computer science.
Thanks to the foresight of Nehru and his science planners, a handful of
Indian Institutes of Technologies (IIT) were set up around the country to
join the prestigious Institute of Science founded in Bangalore in 1933, by
the country's first Nobel laureate in Physics, C. V. Raman. These knowledge
factories developed brains at a time when there was a large demand for them
around the world. [Last year, IIT, Delhi, had 130,000 applicants for 2000
places, and entry into the Inst. of Science is even tougher.] With GRE
scores for US graduate school entrance, in the top 99 percentile, these
bright people headed for the top technical institution, often with full
scholarships. Today's success of India in the IT arena owes a great deal to
these home institutions.
How real is India's performance?
Of the 22,000 graduates from IIT, Bombay, 6000 are working outside India --
mostly in the US. Nearly 750 high-tech companies in Silicon Valley are led
by executives of Indian origin. Time magazine honored the brightest by
showing the top 5 on its recent cover. Clinton during his Indian trip
highlighted the work of superstars such as Vinod Khosla, who was
instrumental in the rise of Sun Microsystems, and of Ramalinga Raju, who was
behind Intel's Pentium chip. Not only are Indians present at all levels of
computer industry, they are closely knit, and human networking comes
naturally to these first generation expatriates. Their links with the home
country remain strong, and they project the advantage of investment in
India, building up confidence in the country of adoption about the country
of origin.
In India the young view their country's reputation as the world's software
leader as changing their own futures. The change however is presently
confined to the 200 million-strong middle class, but according to some
observers is expected to spread to the urban poor. Not so, according to
Praful Bidwai, who points out the hype behind the big Indian show-and-tell
about their progress.
The Indians have done such a fine job at projecting their standing in the
world of software engineering that we have all come to accept their claims.
Perhaps it is only right that an Indian correct our exaggerated sense of
their prowess. According to Bidwai, " India. ranked 54th of 55 countries in
an IT survey by International Data Corp. Its score is 871, compared with
China's 915, or the US's 5041. (The highest is Sweden's 5062, the lowest
Pakistan's 719.) The penetration of Indian households by PCs is under
one-fifth the world average. Today, it stands at three machines per 1000
people." I trust you registered Pakistan's standing -- 55th. The point
to remember, though, is that Indians, through significant successes, have
generated a feeling of overall confidence within themselves and outsiders.
They can now move forward successfully to eventually match the strongest
players in the games in the decades to come.
The country's software export rose from $150 million in 1990 to $4 billion
currently, which is impressive. The government expects software export
earning by 2008 to be $85 billion. Internet connections are now up 4 fold
to 800 thousand in just four years. (Current estimate of Pakistan's
Internet users stands around 160 thousand.) Microsoft, Oracle, Lucent and
Sun Microsystems have set up shop in Hyderabad, now called Cyberabad and
HiTec City (an acronym for Hyderabad Information Technology-Engineering
Consul tancy) The hardware market is now one million per year, and there are
signs of increasing entrepreneurship, as described by a recently returned
friend from Bombay. He is an expert educational technologist.
Report from Bombay
I will let Zaheer Kidvai describe it in his inimitable style: " The first
knockout punch ... and one that showed up throughout the stay ... was caused
by the billboards. Hundreds of them. All announcing some Internet related
business. I do not refer to regular businesses advertising or announcing
their web presence; I mean businesses that are intrinsically part of the Web
explosion. Other than billboards for some ISPs and a Trade Directory
company, one doesn't come across anything of that nature in Pakistan ...
since no such businesses abound."
"What businesses? For starters, there are the local counterparts of
Amazon.com and Yahoo.com; specialist bookshops and jobseek centers.
BuyAsOne.com is gaining popularity by offering price reductions on any and
everything if more than one independent buyer decides to purchase the same
product (with the price falling near-wholesale prices as more people sign
on)." .
"Finding that NIIT (India's largest network of IT Training Centres) was
setting up a Rs 30-crore ( $8 million) venture for developing online
learning materials aimed at school kids was a jolt! The project will employ
300 teachers, and an equal number of illustrators/designers. Almost 500
programmers with an understanding of Education Applications Development will
interact with educators and children to develop stuff that will be piped to
remote areas where 'bricks-and-mortar' schools seem to suffer the same fate
as they do here."
India now has a $300 M software training industry that is expanding at 30
percent annually. In 1999, the public sector universities, colleges and
polytechnics trained 68,000 people, and the private sector put out an
additional 100 thousand. Software centers once confined to big cities are
now being set up in small towns. Some states are committed to providing
computers to schools, and that too in villages. It is here that the
Pakistan will have to begin -- in education. Our country must ensure that
the educational opportunities are available in the far-flung areas of the
country and to the most disadvantaged.
Expats investing in India
Expatriate Indians, encouraged by their government, have cemented close ties
with India. Being in such large numbers the link between the ones who have
made it good abroad and those back home has been largely automatic and
without state support. Take the 43-year-old graduate from IIT, Bombay,
Rakesh Mathur, who sold off his comparison-shopping service called Junglee
to Amazon in 1998 for $241 million and his links with India. He could be a
role model for Pakistanis overseas wanting to help the old country.
Mathur is busy investing in IT economy back in India. He has set up an IT
incubator at his alma mater, and a venture capital for Indian companies. In
a recent interview with Wired magazine, he explained his investment using
the Silicon valley and Stanford University as the metaphor: "A lot of
economic growth comes out of nuclei. Silicon Valley, for example, is a
nucleus, and the heart of that nucleus is Stanford. A lot of.companies have
been born out of Stanford. It is literally a trillion dollar market
capitalization. The entire Indian economy is probably $200-300 billion. So
you have a nucleus with a very short history, and very much tied to an
institution of academic excellence. My vision is to replicate that in IIT."
When asked whether his work in India has a broader vision, he carried on:
"Yes absolutely. Let's say in 20 years, there are a billion jobs in
information technology. And we fine-tune India to focus only on IT -- which
will take a lot of doing, especially in the field of literacy. Let's say we
are able to focus India on just one thing. It should be possible, given our
advantage in this field, that 4 million of those jobs should be occupied by
India.This is the fastest chance for India to become a super power." Such a
single-minded approach may not be feasible and one can reject it for its
extreme prescription, but it does points to immense opportunities for
developing countries to catch up with the big players. Hear what National
Science Foundation's Director Rita Colwell's, who accompanied Clinton to
India had to say at her talk in Hyderabad: "We can envisage a time when
young scientists from our country and other countries will pursue research
and advanced training at centers of excellence throughout India." In a
saner South Asia of the future, Pakistanis should be the first to take
advantage of the knowledge base established next door.
Pakistan's road ahead
India has come far in IT through hard work and by laying a solid foundation
for growth. These are essentials for progress in our country too. Our IT
policy document is almost in place and its vision and mission statements lay
our succinctly what is important in the policy:
Vision
Harnes s the potential of Information Technology for sustainable development.
Mission
Rapidly develop the infrastructure in synchrony with the creation of
excellently trained individuals and teams. Direct these at transforming our
society into a prosperous and dynamic one-one that values and benefits from
the creation and free flow of information and knowledge. Encourage and
assist the entrepreneurial spirit, and make the fruits of this technology
available to every citizen.
For the successful implementation of Pakistan's IT policy in general, and
for IT education particularly, proper monitoring and evaluation of its
implementation is essential. This will allow mid-course corrections and
thereby avoid expensive mistakes that have plagued previous large projects
in Pakistan. Plans need to be closely tied to the national and
international market demands, which will then largely determine the varying
curriculum and duration of training and apprenticeship required. The draft
IT plan for Pakistan does provide for about Rs 2.5 billion ($50 million) to
be spend on human resource development in the next financial year,
2000-2001.
The government will need to support this effort fully -- in spirit and with
generous funds. Carried forward by a team of dedicated and competent
experts, backed by advice from ex-patriots, there is a good chance of
catching up with the IT world.
An abridged version of this appeared on the Op-Ed page of The News on 14 June 2000, with the title, Catching up with the IT world.
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