What tech-centric policies are political parties offering in their election manifestos?
With less than 10 days to go for Pakistan General Elections 2018, key contesting political parties are propagating their manifestos addressing focal areas of progress for the country.
In the past few years, Pakistan may have emerged as the fifth largest emerging economy. However, it is still coping to build a digital economy and a stable ecosystem for entrepreneurship, which can be detrimental for the country’s economy in the years to come.
The former government had launched various initiatives to provide a bedrock for the digital economy for Pakistan. Be it entrepreneurial initiatives for youth, research centres for academia or tax incentives for the digital industry.
The question now emerges, how much focus have all contesting political parties put on the agenda for continuing to strengthen the local technology and entrepreneurial ecosystem?
It should be noted here that a digital ecosystem is not limited to IT exports or tech startups only. It also encompasses a wider area of leveraging technology through research and development for solving urban and rural challenges, building an infrastructure for e-governance, driving tech innovations in the social sector and building the next generation of the digital workforce.
On the campaign trail, the first party to announce technology as a priority area has been the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaaf (PTI) by launching their 14-point Digital Policy.
Ahead of the elections, the policy has been the first notable effort by any major political party to focus on long term goals to improve Pakistan’s standing in the digital domain.
The policy was followed by the manifesto of the PPP that contains a three-pronged approach for the advancement of the local IT sector.
The approach falls short on chalking out an action plan and revolves around only introducing critical policy statements and regulatory frameworks.
Seemingly added as an afterthought, the technology agenda in the PPP manifesto failed to address education-related incentives and e-governance.
Given the understanding of the technology and entrepreneurial sector that the PML-N gained in their past tenure, their manifesto necessarily puts a strong focus on Digitising Pakistan and it does so with an action plan.
Major incentives already piloted in Punjab are mentioned to be expanded across the country with a strong focus on digitising citizen services.
Here’s how each digital manifesto measures in contrast to the following core areas:
Digital inclusion with mobile, broadband penetration
According to the Pakistan Telecom Authority (PTA), less than 30 per cent of the population of Pakistan has access to the internet, be it broadband or 3G/4G services.
Mobile penetration also stands below 70pc.
In order to accelerate digital inclusion, increased mobile and broadband penetrations should be a priority on the agenda of the elected political party.
The PML-N’s aim to cut down the cost of broadband access can be effective as a short-term goal to increase internet access, while the PTI’s approach to build a larger digital infrastructure will be key to national transformation.