Landlocked between Peru, Brazil, Paraguay, Chile and Argentina,
Bolivia is the highest, and in some respects the most isolated country
in Latin America. It is also one of the most culturally diverse. 80% of
its 8.6 million inhabitants are descended from indigenous Amerindian
peoples.
Rich in natural resources such as natural gas, zinc and gold,
Bolivia is the world’s largest producer of tin. Yet, despite ample
cultural and natural assets, poverty is widespread; 70% of the
population struggles to make a living. Bolivia ranks as one of poorest
countries in the region.
ICT in Bolivia
The number of fixed line and mobile phone subscribers has increased
dramatically over the last 5 years. Growth in the number of people
using the Internet was also seen in the period 2000-2005, increasing
from around 1.5% to nearly 4%. This is a low figure in comparison to
developed countries, but relatively high in terms of the average (8%)
seen in the least developed countries in the world. It provides a
starting point for the current and future activities in ICT4D. The
relatively high adult literacy level in Bolivia (87% in 2005) is
encouraging, and provides a basis for the task of further introducing
ICTs into the development sectors of the country.
IICD’s Bolivia
Country Programme
The Country Programme, known as TiCBolivia
was started in 2000 and is going strong with 16 projects and 2
leveraging programmes in the sector’s agriculture,
governance and education. The
projects have expanded their reach from 90 to 125 access points in
Bolivia: 85 secondary schools and 40 information access
centres in agriculture and governance. The centres have
trained 7,600 persons and serve 64,000 users and over 500,000
beneficiaries operating in all departments of Bolivia. Most
centres are using innovative and sustainable connectivity and ICT
solutions.
Leveraging is realized by support to the Ministry
of Education in the implementation of a national ICT for education
programme including 1,000 telecentres and an education portal providing
content. Participation in this programme enables IICD to broker
expansion of the education projects through co-implementation of the
government programme. Furthermore, IICD advices the Departmental
Government in Santa Cruz in the implementation of an agriculture
information system, based on the experience of project partner ICO.
The partners have consolidated active exchanges of experiences and
lobbying and policy participation in the network
TiCBolivia. The membership is expanded to 25 organisations,
including grass-root organisations, NGO, government and academic
institutions. The network is currently a national reference point for
ICT4D, and is focusing on key needs defined by the partners:
connectivity issues and fund raising.
Impact & lessons learned
IICD and its local partners are extending the development impact of
TiCBolivia to end-users, particularly the rural poor. But what
is the impact so far? How far has it helped to alleviate poverty? And
what lessons have been learned in the process?
We look at a variety of factors to assess the
impact (2006) of the projects, and the lessons learned. In all
sectors this includes measuring awareness, empowerment and economic
impact. In education an additional two factors are quality of education
and socio-cultural impact. For governance projects empowerment is
particularly important, and quality of governance is an additional
indicator.