The Government of Grenada is pleased that so many busy professional persons have
responded to our call for help to address the crucial issue of strategic exploitation of
Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) for the benefit of our peoples and the
Region.
The Government is very pleased that you have taken the time and trouble to come and to
add your knowledge and experience to our National effort. Your manifestation of
cooperation and support is particularly heartening and it strengthens our hope for
improved Regional cooperation, better networking and mutual development. As you give, so
may you receive.
The Government of Grenada recognises and extends its gratitude to the Commonwealth
Partnership for Technology Management - the CPTM - for its support in this germinal effort
in Grenada. CPTM's assistance has given us the confidence to move forward. Without the
help from CPMT, and Dr. Mihaela Smith in particular, Grenada would not have been able to
take this important step in embracing the planning for Information and Communication
Technology.
We wish to urge other organs within the Commonwealth, the United Nations, the European
Union and the Americas to accelerate their various initiatives and support in this field.
The Government of Grenada is convinced that ICT must be embraced as a vital tool in the
next phase of Grenada's development. This need to embrace ICT is true for Grenada as it is
for the other Member States of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States and the other
wider CARICOM states.
In my Millennium Vision delivered on December 31, 1999, the Government of Grenada
acknowledged its determination to give Grenada the knowledge and the power to
significantly improve the livelihood of all its citizens. In that Vision Statement, the
Government proposed the acquisition and utilization of knowledge as one of the most
effective ways of reducing the level of poverty in the domestic economy.
I can repeat part of what was projected in the Vision Statement:
"Government is totally committed to creating an attractive policy and
regulatory environment to facilitate the development . . . of Grenada as a Knowledge
Society."
The Government also designated the new decade as the Knowledge Enhancement Decade for
Grenada and set out a series of specific objectives to be achieved within the ten-year
period.
One of these objectives I can quote for the consideration of this Dialogue is as
follows:
"At least fifty percent of our human resources (must be) engaged in high-value
knowledge-based activities, including information and communication technology, financial
services, education, agriculture, tourism, sport and entertainment."
The Government of Grenada recognises that the development of a knowledge economy
requires the intensification and deepening of the domestic capability for acquisition and
utilization of knowledge in all sectors of the economy, including the traditional sectors,
small businesses and high-tech sectors. It involves the embracing information and
communication technology and its use as a development tool.
To achieve this goal, Grenada must:
Create the right policy and institutional framework and environment to encourage
knowledge-centered activities
Make knowledge the center, the main resource of our new economic and management
environment in the public and in the private sector, in the rural and urban areas of our
Country.
Continuously develop and improve our capacity to generate as well as to seek, find and
acquire knowledge by both the public and private sectors.
Promote and develop the infrastructure for the affordable access to knowledge by all
sectors of the population.
Learn to effectively and efficiently utilize knowledge in all sectors of the economy,
including the Government sector.
Massively and continuously train our people so as to develop our human capital across a
wide range of activities.
Encourage and promote creativity and innovation at institutional and individual levels.
In this context, Information and Communication technologies become the dominant tools
of the knowledge-based economy.
In Grenada, we have taken certain steps which we hope will set the base for use of ICT
by all sectors of the economy:
· The infrastructure of a modern telephone system is virtually in place. Every Parish
has direct access to telephone service and the statistics on the number of connections
suggest that nearly every household in the Country has been connected. The matter of costs
and the range of services are being addressed.
· Cellular phones are becoming commonplace among the business community and, as the
price declines, we hope to see the wider use among householders.
· Cable Television is available in all the parishes in
Grenada, and with 10,000 connections, represents more than one-third of all households.
Moreover, the Cablevision Company, as part of its social commitment, has without cost to
the Government, embarked on a programme of connecting our schools to its cable system.
Close to 50 percent of the schools have already been connected. In so doing, Cablevision
is linking all schools to one central location from which they can receive national
broadcasts. Teachers and students can also take advantage of the many informative and
educational programmes available on the network. This is a free service to our schools and
it offers the potential for teaching, for knowledge acquisition and exchange via the cable
system.
· Electric Power has already become universal in Grenada,
although the matter of cost and prices still has to be addressed.
· It is significant to mention the initiatives in the
private sector by several small computer companies who have combined sales and services
with training in software utilization and hardware repair and maintenance. We also see the
beginning of training in computer programming and the Government is particularly keen to
encourage further development in this field.
Education
Ladies and Gentlemen, in the school system, the Government
has taken the initiative to provide all our secondary schools with Computer labs and meet
the cost of access to the Internet. Significant training has taken place among teachers.
The Ministry of Education advises on some of the uses to which this technology is being
put:
1. The preparation of students for Caribbean Examination
Council Examinations in Information Technology.
2. Cross-curricular networking among local schools and
some schools in North America. This has given a tremendous boost to the information
sharing and acquisition capabilities of our teachers and students.
3. E-mail is becoming the major form of communication
between many schools, the Ministry of Education and external entities like CXC and
Cambridge.
4. A few teachers are known to be pursuing further studies
through the use of the Internet in schools. Most of them are enrolled with Universities
that offer degree programmes on line.
5. The integration of IT into the curriculum has also
begun. To date Math, English, Spanish and Library Science have been partially integrated.
The teachers of these subjects now act increasingly as guides and not merely as teachers
once they do the lessons through the computers.
6. Schools are now using their WebPages to post
information that is pertinent to the public. For example, www.mdc.edu.gd (McDonald College) will give you even the latest points standing
among the competing houses, etc. The systems are also used for staff development
activities. A number of teachers were taught to use the computers for making PowerPoint
presentations etc.
7. Many teachers are using the Web for lesson development
and presentation.
8 Some teachers use the Internet to post their assignments
to the students. The students' work is usually in the form of hard copy since few of them
have access to computers once they are away from school.
These may not be very revolutionary compared to programmes
in more advanced societies; but they show that the initiative of wiring the secondary
schools is beginning to bear fruit. Clearly significant widening and deepening will be
required.
The Public Sector: Modernising Government
The role of Government is a dominant factor in the Grenada
economy. The Government of Grenada accounts for a significant part of the working
population. It is a major contractor for goods and services and a provider of
infrastructure that facilitates the flow of services and information. The Government also
finds itself taking up the slack or pursuing initiatives wherever the private sector lacks
capability or the critical mass or the maturity to favourably transform the operating
environment..
Modernizing the Grenada economy therefore inevitably means
modernizing Government.
Most of the considerations about the use of ICT in
industry or in the private sector also apply to Government. In addition, Government is a
prime technology demonstrator and may have to lead by example. This leadership role
imposes a burden on the Government to be in the forefront of ICT utilization in Grenada.
The costs of early adoption and application of ICT's have to be weighed, among other
things, against benefits that come through the demonstration effect to the rest of the
economy.
Some of the main aims of modernizing Government must
include some of the following:
Making it easier for businesses and individuals to deal
with Government.
Enabling the Government to offer services and information
through the new media of the Internet or later through interactive TV.
Improving communications between different parts of the
Government, making it easier for different parts of the Government to work in
partnerships; and reducing the need to ask people repeatedly for the same information by
different service providers.
Helping the public sector to become itself a learning
organisation by improving access to and organisation of information.
In considering the strategic plan for the Grenada Public
Service, the Government would like to determine the direction and extent of investment for
information systems within the Public Service for the coming three years.
The focus however should not be limited just to the
technology. We would need to give high priority to efficiency factors, service delivery,
wastage avoidance and, at the same time, ensure that there are positive returns to the
investments. The aim must be the optimization of the investments in information systems.
Moreover, the policies, strategies and initiatives with
respect to information systems in the Grenada Public Service must be undertaken within the
process of a holistic strategy for public sector reform. Information systems and
technology are therefore not the end, but are the means that enable the economic,
effective and efficient attainment of the Public Service's main mandate which is the
delivery of services whether infrastructural, economic or social.
Consequently, it is imperative that the Grenada public
service develops, inculcates and sustains an Information Technology culture, embracing a
culture of information resource management, and the capacity for strategic management of
information. The question therefore arises as to the right and appropriate institutional
framework and strategic programme that would result in the inculcation of such a culture
in the Public Service.
The Dialogue can address this. It is clear that the
overall national responsibilities which the Government must exercise in the domestic
economy impose an additional demand on the management capability of the pubic service.
However, the Office of the Prime Minister accepts that it
will have to assume the functional responsibility for the regulatory and strategic
direction of information systems within the Public Service. That would require the
building of institutional and management capacity in that Office.
The process of developing capacities in the other parts of
the public service itself requires strategic planning and managed implementation.
To this effect, a process of capacity building should be
initiated as quickly as possible. Among other things, this should be supported by the
undertaking of an aggressive human resource competence building initiative within the
Public Service.
We would be happy to have this Dialogue point to some
directions in these areas.
Private Investment
The Government of Grenada has long realized the need to
encourage foreign investment as a means of diversification of the economy and of
generating jobs and foreign exchange. In developing a knowledge-based economy and in the
embracing of ICTs, the Government recognises the external factors of investment capital,
the expertise and markets.
The trend towards globalization demands of Grenada the
greater integration of its economy with that of the international community. The need to
do so is inevitable. But, the strategy for doing so remains for the time being in our
hands. Such a strategy must also be developed.
The Government will continue to give high priority to the
attraction of foreign investment in the knowledge and information sector. The Industrial
Development Corporation and related agencies would need to play the major role in this
regard.
Caribbean Relevance
Before I end, let me say a brief word about the Caribbean
relevance of what we undertake here.
In Grenada we have taken the initiative to develop the
beginnings of an ICT Strategic Plan for the Country. The exercise that we undertake here
today must deepen that initiative and embed it into the national economy. More than that,
however, the Government of Grenada is of the view that the exercise must be widened to
embrace initially the Eastern Caribbean in order to ensure that each of our economies
secure optimum benefits from the embracing of ICTs.
Information and Communication Technologies yield their
best economies and cost-effectiveness where large quantum of information and users are
involved. Grenada sees major advantages in a CARICOM-wide ICT strategy and ICT development
programme.
Providers of ICT infrastructure and services are invited
to consider not only a national Grenada development strategy but, also, a
CARICOM/Caribbean framework of expansion, service providers and industry activity. We
think that there is merit here and urge our Caribbean professionals and policy makers to
embrace this concept.
In conclusion, I wish to say that I have a vested interest
in the outcomes of this Dialogue. I will give it my attention and time and look forward to
a fruitful experience for everyone and optimal benefits for Grenada.
Thank you.