[***Moderator's Note: The following article is excerpted from News
Update #64***]


No place is ever perfect but Morocco offers an interesting model for how
the internet and telecoms can be developed if a strategic plan is in
place. It is seeking to use the internet to compete more effectively in
the global economy, grow employment opportunities and to slow down the
drain of skilled workers to Europe. Najat Rochdi describes how the
country has approached the task.

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MOROCCO USES THE WEB TO GET INTO THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
______________________________________________________________________


In Morocco ICT was initially viewed in 1995 as an enabling mechanism to
liberalise the economy and thereby enable Morocco to participate more
effectively in the global economy. It was hoped to slow the emigration
of skilled workers, especially to Europe, as well as to create
employment opportunities.

By 1996 there were already 20 ISPs, some 50 cybercafés, an estimated
10,000 internet subscribers, some 50 websites, 1.4 million fixed
telephone lines and an estimated 100,000 mobile phones. The average cost
of an internet subscription was US$50 /month. But there was no vision
for the development of IT, no action plan, no liberalisation process and
no regulatory process. In March 1998 the responsibility for
implementation of ICT in the country was placed in the Office of the
Prime Minister. With the highest political support as well as the
collaboration of selected business leaders and representatives of civil
society a national action plan was formulated in December 1998 and
finalized in May 1999.

The Telecommunication law (Law 24/96) was passed in 1997 and the
national regulation agency (ANRT) was created in March 1998 and it has
played a very important role in guaranteeing transparency and a fair
competition in the sector. ANRT already issued licenses for GSM, GMPCS
and VSAT. ANRT is an autonomous and independent body.

The Government focused on five key themes that are important for
facilitating the role of knowledge in development and for the effective
use of information and communication technologies (ICTs): Education,
Governance, Private sector development, E-commerce and Access. These
themes, formed the basis for national strategy for IT development and
was called e-Maroc plan to insert Morocco in the knowledge and
Information Society.

The implementation approach adopted went through joint participation of
the public, private, and non-governmental sectors and members of civil
society. Through its broad range of members, the Secretary of State in
charge of IT development strategy endeavours to combine the efforts of
all development shareholders to promote the active use of knowledge for
development and to take advantage of ICTs to facilitate information
sharing, communication, new applications of technology and to foster
democracy and moralisation of public life using ICT as a central tool to
eradicate corruption.

The Government of Morocco is seeking innovative solutions and private
public partnership to put in place the pilot projects in the different
priority themes.

The National Action Plan e-Maroc sets out an overall framework and
strategic priorities over the next decade. It identifies and articulates
practical and measurable activities around which all the actors involved
can carry out their mission.

The Action Plan is based on a set of development issues that is linked
to the strategic priorities themes. The program is based on the
potential of ICTs to create new opportunities to position Morocco in the
global economy as well as new tools for economic and social development.
In addition, the importance of the private sector¹s role is increasingly
recognised, in order to encourage more equitable access to, and use of,
ICTs. This is especially the case where it comes to investment to ensure
universal access and services to population in rural area.

The Action Plan is designed in full recognition that strategic planning
and implementation to confront the challenges of the Information Age
must reflect both national and local needs. It is acknowledged every
societal actor has a critical role to play in this process and that the
Action Plan should provide a framework for creative partnerships
designed to maximise the inclusion of all societal actors: public
administration, private sector, local authorities and citizen.

The e-Maroc program covers the following actions:


o Increase the volume and accessibility of content, information and
knowledge flows in local languages
o Develop national and local portals to encourage information and
activity sharing, local content and use it as a channel for public
administration services delivery.
o Create enabling legal and regulatory environments for ICTs
applications development and use (digital signature, privacy,
copyrights, USO,..)
o Set up innovative financing: Venture capital funds for start up;
clearing house of ICTs ideas for investment; initiatives to develop ICT
capacity; advocacy to private sector of opportunities; Open access fund,
to networks and enterprises; venture capital funds for local innovators,
technopark.
o Create Education-to-employment strategies: Assess skill needs in the
ICT area
o Develop Educational strategy to close gaps
o Improve the educational system¹s ability to develop valuable
ICT-related skills among the population
o Improve knowledge-based education systems with the integration of ICTs
at all levels: primary, secondary and universities as well as
reconversion of employments
o Work with Ministries of Education to reform education to integrate
ICTs to enable teachers & students to create knowledge; technical
training for teachers;
o Improve the teachers and students ability to process information and
development understanding to create knowledge; capacity building and
professional skill development.
o Put in place e-government projects ;
o Create mechanisms for evaluation, feedback and monitoring of
governance practices.
o Provide training and education in governance for civil servants and
citizen
o Sensitise decision makers and politicians to ?good¹ governance and
strengthening civil society.
o Increase accountability and transparency in governments; Focus on
public participation process,
o Collection, production and dissemination of local knowledge through
the use of ICT¹s.
o Support women entrepreneurs in rural area either in ICT businesses or
using ICTs, with online mentoring and financing; build links between
women-owned businesses and corporations for business-to-business
markets.
o Improve the ability of women entrepreneurs to successfully build their
businesses. This is done through a project called "e-coopératives" where
the Government is sponsoring, in partnership with private companies, an
e-commerce platform to commercialize women product in agriculture and
handcraft.

Therefore, features of the plan included improving the productivity of
Moroccan industry; to modernize the public sector administration, making
it more efficient and responsive and gaining greater trust by rendering
it more transparent; and to reinforce the governments programmes aimed
at eradicating poverty. In the latter regard information technology was
to be directed a raising levels of literacy; improving the delivery of
government services, especially health, education and training; and to
give isolated rural communities a sense of solidarity and identification
with national development goals.

An implementation strategy for the action plan was devised with emphasis
on preparing the necessary legal environment; building consensus for
change among the private and public sectors as well as civil society
based on partnerships and common benefits that would result from the
introduction of ICT; and a well planned and steady promotion campaign
aimed at many levels from parliamentarians to town meetings and for
special interest groups such as the media.

An analysis of the impact of the ICT campaign on the national economy is
awaited, but there is broad agreement it has contributed to stability
and a growing sense of confidence that Morocco can compete in the global
economy. Some tangible results are a positive impact on the important
tourism industry [a new proposal is to develop one portal for all
tourist information]; the development of ISPs and cybercafés have
provided employment opportunities, especially for young people, and
provided an entrepreneurial spirit; and the curricula in engineering
schools have been revised to give emphasis to the IT sector. An academic
and research network has been set up and already connects through 16
nodes countrywide all the universities and engineering schools. The
impact of this network has profoundly impacted on the interaction
amongst teaching staff as well as students both within the country and
overseas.

Today with population of 28 million, of which over 50% are under the age
of 24 years, Morocco has 1924 ISPs and cybercafés and a reasonable
communications infrastructure of 1.6 million fixed and 4,000,000 mobile
telephones. The number of websites passed 4,000 during 2001 and most
significantly the cost of a monthly Internet subscription dropped to
about US$6 per month. Priority development targets are to accelerate the
development of national content; to extend access to rural areas; and to
complete liberalisation of the telecommunications sector by the end of
the year 2002.

Education will be the central priority for the next coming five years.
We believe that Human Capital is a critical criteria to succeed in
positioning Morocco among emergent markets by 2005. Men and Women are
the factor of success for development, if they are well skilled and
involved they will pull the Country toward development. If they are
missed in the policy, the country will miss development.

Najat Rochdi is Director Secretary of State in charge of Post,
Telecommunications & Information Technology, Kingdom of Morocco




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