This summary is part of a research project carried out between March and October 2006 in support of the International Institute for Communication and Development (IICD), one of The Communication Initiative (The CI)'s
partners.
According to this case study, Nepal was greatly influenced by the progress of the many countries in the region that had already welcomed the development of information technology (IT), particularly the two Asian superpowers, India and China. Nepal had witnessed India's ability to carve out a market in the IT sector, and was hoping to find a place in the field. Many other countries in the region, including Malaysia and Singapore, had already recognised the importance of the production and use of information and communication technology (ICT) for competitiveness and growth and the need to incorporate national information infrastructures to sustain and expand their economies.
Author Leanne Burton explains that, in 1996, the Nepalese Government created a Ministry of Science and Technology (MoST) which took on the role of promoting, facilitating, and regulating science and technology - particularly in the IT sector - in the country. The basic goal of the Ministry was to create an environment for the adequate development of science and technology and make necessary arrangements for its effective application in the task of national development.
Early in the planning process, the government expressed its desire to mold Nepal into a knowledge-based society. The broad objective for the IT sector was to promote IT as a tool for social and economic development; to promote social development by using IT to improve agricultural, health, education, and other services and sectors; and to promote economic development by establishing an IT park to produce and export low-cost software. Specific objectives were to:
- involve the private sector in the development of the information and communication sector;
- extend communication services to rural areas by adopting modern technology;
- develop the information and communication sector as a tool for socio-economic development.
One major impetus for adopting an IT policy was to attract foreign investment and to create a foundation for greater involvement in the global economy (through e-commerce and promotion of the private sector).
The process of producing the IT policy was a long but inclusive one. However, over the last few years with scarce resources tied up in security efforts, implementation of the IT Policy has slipped from the government’s priority list. Although the institutional provisions have been put in place, the key implementing body is too under-resourced to effectively oversee implementation.