Does big data have a big future in East Asia?
Despite its late start in the global economic race, South-East Asia is now considered to have one of the world’s fastest growth rates, with an average GDP of more than 6% over the past decade.
The World Bank forecasts that after the economic recession, countries such as the Philippines, Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos will begin to regain their GDP momentum, and can expect growth rates of more than 7% in 2015.
Meanwhile, South-East Asia is quickly catching up with worldwide advances in information technology (IT), and enjoys strong growth and development in that sector. According to a forecast by Gartner, the total value of IT services in Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia between now and 2017 will be $74 billion. Big data and cloud computing are driving progress in banking, healthcare, telecommunications and distribution.
South-East Asia has also become an attractive destination for outsourcing. According to an early-2014 Gartner survey, three out of five new offshore outsourcing locations in the Asia Pacific region come from the south-east, and this includes the Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia. Meanwhile, the Tholons 2014 Top 100 Outsourcing Destinations Report found 14 South-East Asian cities on the list, seven of them in the Philippines.
In addition, at a recent meeting of telecoms and IT ministers, the master plan for ASEAN’s ICT development was approved. Information communications technology was considered an important tool for the region’s economic growth, as well as a bridge to connect ASEAN countries with development trends happening in the rest of the world.
This has helped to create demand for similar regional conferences, and showed ministers’ commitment to creating an active IT environment. Thanks to that, regional enterprises will also have a chance to participate in building IT systems for the region, and even produce their own software solutions.
Investors see South-East Asia as full of IT investment potential, just as China was at the end of the last decade. Technological enterprises in this region now see a big development opportunity, the first of which is to meet IT demand. However, to take advantages of these opportunities, companies will need to catch up quickly on the scale, capacity and human resources required by the latest technological trends.
Many IT companies are anxious to contribute to ASEAN’s rapid development. FPT, for example, has been funding research into social, mobile, analytics and cloud (SMAC) solutions for socio-economic sectors such as banking, telecommunications and healthcare.
Diversification and specialization is the future of technology in South-East Asia. Besides outsourcing, IT companies will channel their resources and initiative into sectors such as solutions development, system integration and SMAC. We can expect this to be an essential step to improving the region’s status on the world stage.
Author: Truong Gia Binh is the Chairman of FPT Corporation and a Foundation Member of the World Economic Forum
Image: Indonesian youths use computers at an employment fair. REUTERS/Beawiharta
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