the internet- a little ingenuity is all you need

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    The Internet: A little Ingenuity Is All You Need

    By: Fanele Chester (Communications Intern)

    The Africa Attractiveness Report 2011 was published by Ernst & Young, in collaboration with

    the Oxford Economics, in April 2011. The objective of this study was to document was businessleaders have to say about Africas growth story, the latest foreign direct investment trends and

    the regions growth potential.

    One of the key findings from the study that foreign direct investment (FDI) in Africa is moving

    away from extractive activities and diversifying into other, service based ones. In addition, these

    FDI flows are projected to grow to US$150 billion in 2015, in line with improving global

    perceptions and Africans own confidence in the regions potential.

    That being said, Africa still attracts only 5% of global FDI flows, although the region enjoys one

    of the highest returns to investment in the world, and has an economic growth rate surpassed

    only by Asia. The main reason behind this low figure, and a challenge raised by investors in the

    region, is the lack of high quality human resource which includes skilled workers with extensive

    experience and talent in industry technology, due to poor investment in education and training.

    Three quarters of FDI in Africa between 2003 and 2010 was concentrated in only ten countries,

    with South Africa receiving 15% of all investment. Apart from being one of the most well

    known countries, has a large market (US$360 bn compared to >US$10 bn for Swaziland) and

    with the best developed economy, South Africa has shown the most political reform,

    macroeconomic stability and social development.

    On the other hand, Swaziland has one of the last telecommunications monopolies in the world.This is a significant challenge because the areas FDI is diversifying into, namely business and

    financial services, consumer products, tourism, construction and telecommunications all use

    innovative technologies that are increasingly internet based. The internet revolution, however,

    depends on the modernization of traditional infrastructure, specifically, telecoms. In other words,

    the internet and economic growth are directly and positively related due to productivity gains

    linked to information technologies.

    Among other economic benefits, the internet offers opportunities to expand into domestic and

    foreign markets, means for innovative product development, and the rapid deployment of game-

    changing ideas. It is no surprise that the local financial sector is one of the most developedsectors in the country, with oursoundness of banks rankings at 44 according to the World

    Economic Forum. The evidence is clear in the success of internet banking in the country, as well

    as the development and implementation of new services such as money transfer between cell-

    phones. The merge of technology and communications, with the internet used as an innovative

    tool, has been successful in increasing economic gains across industries.

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    The same is true for Africa in general: the financial services sector share of new FDI projects

    between 2003 and 2010 increased from 11% to 16%, where coal, oil and natural gas decreased

    from 17% to 5% in the same period. Communications increased from 2% to 8%, and business

    services from 4% to 8%.

    These statistics are not surprising: as a huge internet consumer, the economic advantages of theinternet were obvious, and came at a very low cost, free to be exact. Once the basic infrastructure

    was secured, in the form of a laptop, establishing an online presence through a blog Fashion Et

    Al on www.fanelelove.com was easy. Fashion Et Al is hosted on Blogger, a free Google

    platform for blogs. A blog (web log) is an online platform which allows one to be the writer,

    editor, and publisher of information.

    When a post is created and published on Fashion Et Al, within seconds it immediately updates

    on Twitter, Facebook, as well as the blogs fan page on Facebook, and on a separate blog on

    Tumblr (another hosting site for blogs). The fan page automatically retweets this same message

    on my Twitter. Finally, a Networked Blogs application enabled on my Facebook account extractsthe same blog and posts it on the wall.

    In the end, one blog postis circulated on social media three times on Twitter reaching about 70

    followers each time, four times on Facebook reaching about 1600 friends and 400 fans each

    time, and once on Tumblr reaching 7 followers. This is excluding the 60 individuals who have

    directly subscribed on the blog itself via the Gmail accounts, who get updates either through

    email or on their Google Reader.All of this mileage is completely free! The beautiful thing about

    this interconnectivity is that it was engineered through the authors own innovation. The linkages

    between all the social media sites are not default settings on the template provided by Google.

    In Swaziland, when we talk about communications, advertising and marketing mileage, the most

    economical and effective tool is the radio, followed by print media and television. The internet

    does not play a significant role in economic landscape of the country, and contributes a

    negligible percentage in the total economic growth. This is despite the fact that the United

    Nations, in its Millennium Development Goals, lists internet penetration as a key metric in

    efforts to reduce poverty and encourage national development.

    In conclusion, the benefits of the internet, especially for developing countries, and in particular

    for Swaziland as we face an economic crisis, are unmistakable and must be taken into

    consideration as we forge forward with a new strategy for growth. One example includescreating and implementing an e-government online system of registering companies by,

    effectively removing duplicated costs such as the separate costs for reserving and registering a

    company, which would centralize and computerize all the information and documents required.

    This would significantly increase the amount of activity in the private sector, by both foreign

    investors and local entrepreneurs.

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    List of references available upon request. Please email Fanele Chester atfanelec@business-

    swaziland.com. Produced by the Communications Office at the Federation of Swaziland

    Employers & Chamber of Commerce.