Over the past decade there have been many initiatives formed to spur the growth of the local technology industry.
Most
started with a lot of promise but ran out of stream overtime, often as a
consequence of stifling regulation, poor supporting processes,
gatekeeper push back, poor execution and wrong timing. Here are the
three initiatives that I think the government should revisit.
Public key infrastructure
The
public key infrastructure (PKI) project was meant to enhance
intra-Africa trade, starting with our immediate neighbours. It could be
argued that variants of blockchain-based platforms, such as ethereum,
may have rendered PKI obsolete.
However, my take is
that smart PKI deployments could be used to soften the regulatory stance
on the risk profile of blockchain. Think of it as an additional layer
of comfort in low trust environments.
Enterprise Kenya
This
was one of the more notable concepts from government led innovation, a
public private partnership was set to commoditise the startup
experience. It was meant to level the playing field when it comes to
resource access.
The plan was simple; to provide the scaffolding many enterprises
needed in early growth stages and create 180,000 direct jobs while
birth 55 global Kenyan companies. It was supposed to catalyse $500
million in technology-based venture funding and grow our ITeS exports to
$1 billion.
The proposed organisational setup that
would consist of a management board, investment board, and innovation
council with an initial capitalidation of a Sh2 billion faced headwinds
before it could even get started. The need still exists and the mission
can be accomplished.
Open data
It
is impossible to conjure up all the possible service permutations that
could be delivered to citizens with Open Data. In championing this
project, former ICT permanent secretary Bitange Ndemo pushed hard to
break some government silos during his time.
This
spawned numerous solutions that allowed us to tinker and test the
possibilities of what could be done, even if most of what came out of
that season was labelled “m-vitus”.
Without an in-house champion, data soon grew stale or what was released was not sufficiently interesting.
Entrepreneurs and their teams are now more seasoned and it would be worthwhile for government to refresh these ideas.
No comments :
Post a Comment