The Role of State Government in Developing India's Internet
Larry Press, Grey
Burkhart, Sy Goodman, Arun Mehta, and Arun Mittal, OnTheInternet, pp 35-37,
November/December, 1998
One hears speculation that
globalization and the Internet may portend the end of national sovereignty and government power, but national
governments play a central role in Internet diffusion today. The government plays different roles in each
nation, and that role may vary over time.
For example, in Communist nations like Cuba or China, the government is
the Internet operator and regulator. In
the U. S., the government played a significant role in establishing the
Internet and earlier networks with purchases, research support, and direct
operation [2], but drew back as industry stepped in.
The Indian Federal government
has impeded the Internet with a combination of neglect and government monopoly;[1]
however, the state governments have been more positive. During a recent visit to India, we saw
several promising examples of joint ventures between State governments and
private industry. These projects
represent a middle ground between government control and laissez faire -- a
pro-active government provides leadership and incentives to involve a private
firm, and both end up with equity.
One example is in the
northeast of India in the state of West
Bengal. Millenium Systems, a software
startup with expertise in enterprise resource planning, data warehousing, and
PeopleSoft and Oracle development was partially funded by the State. Millenium is aptly named because entering
their offices from the crowded, impoverished streets of Calcutta is like a
1000-year time warp. They have 3 Sun
and 3 Intel servers on a switched-Ethernet LAN with 40 Pentium II-based
developer workstations, a 16-PC training room, and 19 administrative machines
arranged in newly outfitted offices and cubicles. Their financing combines private venture capital, founder's
capital, and loans and credit lines from government financial
institutions. Seed capital for this
venture was from the West Bengal Electronics Limited, a state agency which
encourages IT ventures with leadership, equity investments and
infrastructure.
Moving south, we visited the
state of Andhra Pradesh where Chief Minister[2]
N. Chandrababu Naidu has great confidence in IT as a means of improved
government and regional development.
Soon after his election in 1995, Mr. Naidu installed an Executive
Information System (EIS) allowing him to monitor governmental programs.[3] His system is similar to an industrial
EIS, where an executive can see high level summaries, and "drill
down" to view underlying detail.
It now covers 44 areas including law and order, family welfare,
hospitals, education, electrical power (see Figure 1), and he said he uses it
for an hour each morning. Naidu also
has a geographical information system for roads, irrigation and drainage and
forestry and wasteland development.
He plans to network the entire
state, and envisions improved government efficiency via an intranet and
bringing government service to the people electronically, as in Singapore. He also sees IT as a path to development and
investment. In March, 1998, he met with
Bill Gates, and Microsoft subsequently decided to locate a Windows NT
development team in the HITEC City complex in Andhra Pradesh and to establish a
training facility at the new Indian Institute for Information Technology (IIIT)
there.
HITEC City is a 175-acre joint
venture between the government and Larsen & Toubro (L&T), India's
largest construction company. The
government contributed the land, widened access roads, and so forth, and
L&T is responsible for design, finance, construction and marketing. L&T owns 89% and the government
11%. The development will have Internet
connectivity, 3,000 telephone and ISDN lines, a dedicated power plant, and
generators for fall back.
The centerpiece of HITEC City is
a 500,000 square-foot, ten-story building on which exterior construction is
already complete (Figure 2). The building is 60% committed to companies
including Oracle and Motorola. The
spaces are sold to the tenants, with L&T staying on to maintain and operate
the building. L&T has been involved
in similar projects in other states, and is efficient in construction of
hi-tech buildings. They have a modular
design with an atrium and services in the center of the building and a fiber
backbone and wiring closets on each floor.
They utilize both modern high-rise construction equipment like cranes
and large numbers of women carrying constructions material on their heads, as
is appropriate in a nation with India's demographics.
The IIIT is a new university
which will open in Fall, 1998 with 50 students, and will grow to 600
undergraduate and 650 graduate students by 2004. The government was able to contribute 62 acres of land and the
initial buildings, but finding and affording qualified faculty and equipment
was a problem.
Industrial companies were
invited to locate their data centers and training facilities on the IIIT
campus. IBM, Oracle, Microsoft,
Metamor, and Satyam Computers have accepted, and, at the time of our visit, IBM
had already occupied a floor of a finished building, installed a mainframe
computer, and established a school. The
university will have a core faculty, but will rely upon the industrial training
staff as adjunct professors, and the industrial partners will install modern
equipment, which will be shared with the university. Some may worry that the "university" will become a
"trade school," training people on the hardware and software of the
industrial participants; however, the undergraduate curriculum (Table 1)
suggests a reasonable balance between theory and practical application.
This sort of partnership is not
without precedent. For example, in the
late 1950s and 1960s IBM commonly cooperated with universities by building
computer centers and offering deep discounts.
Today it is common for technical courses in U. S. universities to be
taught by part-time faculty who work in industry. IIIT goes a step further.
It is not a conventional university with an auxiliary center or adjunct
faculty; it was planned as a cooperative venture from the start.
It is noteworthy that these
initiatives took hold at the state level, where the Indian Department of
Telecommunication and other agencies have less power than at the Federal
level. In fact, projects like these
have inspired much of the work of the newly formed Federal Task Force which is
charged with making India an IT superpower by building infrastructure,
increasing software and IT services export, and bringing IT to all of India
within ten years. Chief Minister Naidu
co-chairs the Task Force and their 108-point Action Plan[4]
explicitly recommends the replication of developments like HITECH City and the
IIIT throughout India and financial assistance like Webel provides to West
Bengal software startups. Partnerships
between state and local governments and private enterprise have preceded and
influenced Federal planning and Internet development in India, and may do so in
other emerging nations.
References:
2. Press, Larry, Seeding Networks: the Federal Role,
Communications of the ACM, p.p. 11-18, Vol. 39., No. 10, October, 1996,
reprinted in OnTheInternet, Vol. 3, No. 1, January/February, 1997, p.p. 13-22.
Foundation Courses |
Core Courses |
Management Applications |
Projects |
(30%) |
(40%) |
(15%) |
(15%) |
Mathematics: Linear Algebra, Differential Equations,
Numerical Maths, Discrete Structures, Probability, Stochastic Models Physics Electronic Materials Humanities, Science Technology
and Society Computer Programming Generic Skills |
Computer Sciences: Data Structures and Algorithms,
Architecture, AI Software: Programming Languages, Operating Systems,
Compilers, DBMS, Graphics, Virtual Reality Communication Systems: Digital Communication, Communication
Networks, Internet and Web Applications in Business |
Operations Management Quality and Reliability MIS IT Applications in Business
Process Management |
Mid-term Mini Project Final Year Project |
|
|||
Table h1: IIIT Undergraduate curriculum. |
Figure 1: The Executive Information System of the Chief Minister of Andhra
Pradesh.
Figure 2: The Central Building at HITEC City in Andhra Pradesh.
[1] The current government has moved boldly to reverse this policy, and has empowered a Task Force to plan and implement the transformation of India into a global IT and networking superpower in ten years, see [1] and http://it-taskforce.nic.in/it-taskforce/.
[4] http://it-taskforce.nic.in/it-taskforce/itintro.htm.