Having seen the ITU’s feet of clay, I decided to probe further. True enough, there was more evidence of rot in the ITU methodology. It fails the smell test.
The Skills subindex places India behind Swaziland. Enough said.
Posted on November 12, 2011 / 0 Comments
Having seen the ITU’s feet of clay, I decided to probe further. True enough, there was more evidence of rot in the ITU methodology. It fails the smell test.
The Skills subindex places India behind Swaziland. Enough said.
The idea of turning Sri Lanka into a regional data centre hub is an attractive one, particularly in the context of growing global demand for digital infrastructure and AI-driven services. However, it raises important economic questions, especially whether this is a viable and high-return investment strategy for a small, fiscally constrained economy like Sri Lanka.
Nepal’s evolving digital landscape highlights a growing tension between constitutional guarantees of privacy and access to information, and a fragmented, outdated data governance framework. In a recent article published in Republica on March 17, 2026, Avash Mainali, Country Researcher for Nepal for LIRNEasia’s D4D Asia project, argues that while the introduction of the Personal Data Protection Policy, 2082 (2025), marks a positive step, its impact will depend on whether it can move beyond aspirational language to enforceable rights.
Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming labour markets worldwide. In the Global South, however, these changes are unfolding unevenly, shaped by labour markets defined by high levels of informality, uneven social protection, and large skills gaps.
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