Vietnam ranked 55th in digital
transformation with 41 points in Huawei's Global Connectivity
Index (GCI 2020).
Since 2015, the GCI has tracked the progress of 79 economies in deploying
digital infrastructure and capabilities.
This year’s index benchmarks 79 countries according to their performance in 40
indicators that track the impact of ICT on a nation’s economy, digital
competitiveness, and future growth. Combined, these countries account for 95
percent of global GDP.
Starters are proactively catching up with the other clusters. The average
scores of all three clusters have improved since 2015, with Starters showing
the highest compound annual growth rate (CAGR) with 4.95 percent, followed by
Adopters (4.58 percent) and Frontrunners (3.38 percent).
Starters improved in broadband performance faster than the other clusters, said
the report. Over the last five years, they have increased mobile broadband
adoption by over 2.5 times, with several countries achieving close to 100
percent coverage.
Their 4G subscriptions rose from an average of 1 percent in 2015 to an average
of 19 percent in 2019. In some countries, 30 percent of the population has
high-speed 4G mobile broadband coverage.
Mobile broadband affordability, as measured by the cost of mobile broadband
divided by GNI per capita, has improved by 25 percent.
Increased Internet
access has opened up new economic opportunities, causing annual
spending on e-commerce to almost double since 2014 to more than 2,000 USD per
person in 2019.
Some Starters were moving up the GCI cluster, increased their GCI scores by up
to 17 percent, and managed to raise GDP to a level that was 22 percent higher
than some peers.
Vietnam is one of the countries becoming adopter economies last year.
Economies with higher ICT maturity could drive digital transformation to
respond quicker to the COVID-19 pandemic, mitigating the negative impact on GDP
per capita by 50 percent, says the report.
Organisations in economies with higher GCI scores are able to react faster to
the COVID-19 pandemic and use digital tools and services to mitigate the impact
of lockdowns and social distancing. Due to the availability of high-speed
broadband, cloud services, AI, and IoT solutions, they could quickly implement
distributed workforce models, migrate to e-commerce platforms, and digitally
transform their operations to maintain business continuity, it says.
The forecast decline in their GDP per capita is about 50 percent lower than for
emerging GCI economies, it says./.
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Science-technology has made practical contributions to the country’s industrialisation and modernisation process and national defence-security while improving social welfare and people’s lives.
Digital transformation is a solution of vital importance to businesses worldwide, including those in Vietnam.
Since December 2020, over 3,000 enterprises have approached the programme for help, with more than 500 micro, small and medium enterprises among them deemed to have real demand for digital transformation.
Over 60 technological companies and experts have taken part in digital transformation, many of them are developing “Make in Vietnam” platforms.
The rate of Vietnamese firms using digital payment services is on par with several regional nations while the rate of fixed and mobile broadband subscriptions is relatively high compared to Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia.
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