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1 Executive summary 4
2 Introduction6
2.1 Identity, digital identity and authentication 7
Appendix A
National digital development plans 50
Appendix B
Index methodology 54
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
Foreword
This is the third report the GSMA has produced on Digital Societies in
Asia Pacific and builds on the findings of previous studies.1
1 See Building digital societies in Asia: Making commerce smarter and Advancing Digital Societies in Asia
Foreword 2
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
Digital identity is more than just a matter of policy particularly in light of recent, high-profile data leaks
and convenience; it provides the opportunity to such as a low-tech breach in India’s Aadhaar national
interact with government securely, while also enabling identity scheme. 2 Similarly, in light of well publicised
governments to better respond to – and improve the hacking incidents such as the $81 million3 cyber-attack
lives of – citizens. Authentication of identity ensures on Bangladesh Bank in 2016, secure cyber protocols
that citizens and governments remain accountable and platforms need to be in place to instil confidence
for their actions, while enabling them to perform in users and deter any would-be cyber criminals.
necessary actions, such as paying taxes or distributing Governments have a legitimate interest in enacting
social welfare. Digital identity connects people to measures to ensure cybersecurity, but the measures
electoral participation, educational opportunities, should not impede the development of a digital
welfare payments, banking and economic society. A worrying trend in Asia Pacific is to legislate
development – all of which create a platform for the various requirements for data localisation – the storing
private sector to provide services and for the economy of citizens’ data within a country rather than outside,
to flourish. in the cloud, wherever it is most economical to do
so. This will not only slow progress towards creating
In Asia Pacific, digital identity is a priority in lower- regional digital societies; it could also fail to address
income countries as a primary source of identification the aims of enhancing security, data privacy or
and as an opportunity to foster digital, financial and consumer protection.4
social inclusion. Such countries often lack robust
systems for physical proof of identity and are building This report focuses on the need for governments
their identity systems on a digital basis, leapfrogging and businesses in Asia Pacific to partner in creating a
traditional paper-based systems. The scale of the digital identity programme that applies across national
identity problem in these countries is vast, with domains and disparate legal jurisdictions. With
millions of people unregistered – a situation that not rapid adoption of new, mobile-based technologies
only causes problems in accessing e-government and a broad array of states at different stages of
services, but also raises the most basic challenges such development, Asia Pacific is ideally placed to provide
as buying a phone or applying for a bank account. the backdrop for uniting disparate stakeholders to
promote the growth and expansion of digitisation.
In higher-income countries, digital identity enables the
transformation of traditional commerce and services As with many rapidly evolving aspects of the digital
into more efficient and convenient e-commerce age, analysis of current issues of digital identity unveils
and e-services. Canada, Belgium, France, Finland, still more questions. It is important to raise and clarify
Singapore and South Korea, among others, focus on these questions so that we might begin to consider
creating digital identity ecosystems for successful possible answers. Assisting in providing at least some
delivery of digital public services. These countries of the answers is our ambition.
emphasise digital identities to combat online fraud,
ensure cybersecurity and enable digital, societal, trust-
based transformation.
2 "Data Breach: Aadhaar Details up for Grabs for Just Rs 500", thewire.in, January 2018
3 All references to $ are to US dollars.
4 For more detail, see Regulating for a digital economy: Understanding the importance of cross-border data flows in Asia, Brookings, March 2018
Foreword 3
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
1 Executive summary
In today’s digital society, intelligently connected devices and
interoperable services are revolutionising the way individuals and
enterprises connect, communicate and navigate their surroundings.
In Asia Pacific, where connectivity is primarily mobile-first and, in
some emerging economies, mobile-only, mobile operators continue
to play a critical role in the delivery of the digital services that enable
and nurture the development of digital societies.
Connectivity is a recognised precondition for a digital This report addresses these issues and sets out
society. The adoption of digital identities is another, how digital identity systems can enable citizens to
leading to significant quantifiable economic benefits. participate seamlessly and securely in our emerging
One estimate, for example, quantifies the economic digital societies. Achieving scale and effective
value of a system for establishing secure, nationwide registration of the population is crucial if governments
digital identities in Australia alone at $8 billion per year.5 are to achieve an inclusive digital society. Mobile
operators can leverage unique resources to facilitate
There is no single solution for providing digital identity not only scale, but also a more secure and efficient
across Asia Pacific. While governments are central registration process. We look at a host of country
in supporting the establishment of digital identity examples and use cases to show the diverse landscape
systems, the increasingly cross-border nature of digital of emerging, transition and advanced digital societies
activity and the need for added layers of authentication in Asia Pacific, along with recommendations for
to ensure consumer trust have made it imperative for progressing from one stage to the next. These
governments and the private sector to collaborate in examples include payment systems that enhance trade
developing and deploying solutions that protect users via cross-border data transactions, initiatives that
and keep personal information private and secure. improve consumers’ lives with digital services tied to
a digital identity, and digital IDs for refugees to foster
their financial and social inclusion in host countries.
5 “A frictionless future for identity management: A practical solution for Australia’s digital identity challenge”, Australia Post, December 2016
Executive summary 4
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
6 To calculate the overall digital societies index and each of its components, we used a number of sources, including data from the UN, World Bank, WEF, IMF,
GSMA Intelligence and the GSMA Mobile Connectivity Index. See Appendix B for a full methodology.
Executive summary 5
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
2 Introduction
In this report, we explore the role of government, mobile operators and the broader private sector in
supporting digital identity in Asia Pacific. We focus on eight countries that showcase the variation in the
region: Australia, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Singapore and Thailand. With the
exception of Malaysia, we also examined these countries in the first GSMA Digital Societies report for
Asia Pacific in 2016, and, as in the following year’s report Advancing Digital Societies in Asia, we here
re-examine the progress countries in Asia Pacific have made along their digital society path. Malaysia
is a new addition to the list because of its emerging digital identity plans. The focus countries sit within
our three broad categories of digital society – emerging, transition and advanced – based on the level of
connectivity and the relative development of the various components of their digital societies.
7 For example, in New South Wales, Australia, drivers will soon be able to have a ‘digital’ driving licence. This is akin to digitisation of a physical ID, more than what we refer to as a
‘digital ID’. It is not clear how validated, verified and authenticated the driving licence will be. In addition, it seems that it will not support other uses, at least for the time being.
8 This is particularly pertinent in light of the recently reported breach of data from India’s Aadhaar scheme.
Introduction 6
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
The outline for this report is as follows: identity and authentication, and explores the role of
appropriate privacy and security frameworks.
• In Chapter 3, we consider a number of digital
identity programmes in operation across our range • Chapter 6 analyses the components of the digital
of economies, from the developing Bangladesh9 economy index and compares scores across
and Pakistan, to transition economies of Indonesia, countries and progress since the 2016 GSMA
Malaysia and Thailand, to the more advanced Digital Societies report. We also plot each of the
economies of Australia, Japan and Singapore. Of index’s indicators against a new ‘digital identity
particular note are the initiatives undertaken by enabler score’, to highlight the role that a focus on
regional organisations such as ASEAN to ensure digital identity – and, in particular, the frictionless
proper cross-border data flows. authentication of identity online and across
networks – plays in progress to a fully realised
• In Chapter 4, we provide an overview of the
digital society.
many, quantifiable benefits achieved and likely
to be achieved for various countries’ consumers, • Chapter 7 offers guidance on steps for the focus
businesses, societies and economies. countries to improve their transformation to digital
societies. These steps go beyond identity, but
• Chapter 5 looks at the need to foster trust in the
identity remains an underlying requirement, so we
digital economy, explains the difference between
consider it separately in its own right.
a collection of electronically captured and stored identity attributes, including biographic data (e.g.
name, age, gender and address) and biometric data (e.g. fingerprints, iris scans and facial photographs)
that uniquely describe a person within a given context and are used for electronic transactions.10
An understanding of the way to prove identity in the Banks can be effective secondary IDPs, as can mobile
physical, pre-digital world is essential to master the network operators. Secondary IDPs take the identity
multiple facets of a digital identity. In the physical of a primary IDP such as a passport and use that as the
world, identity can be defined as a collection of identity basis for their customer identification. The secondary
attributes such as biographic and number data that IDPs usually add other characteristics and their own
uniquely describe a person within a given context and reference numbers to protect personal information
are used for transactions. and other operational efficiencies. In the absence of
efficient and cost-effective access to primary identity,
A primary ID provider (IDP) usually provides and secondary IDPs can fill the gap only up to a point by
collects identity attributes about a person. In the pre- seeking identities from multiple sources to reduce the
digital world, different government agencies attach risk of fraudulent activity.
identity attributes to individuals, such as numbers for
national IDs, passport documents and birth certificates. To do so, the IDP needs to carry out the following:
A system for the allocation of primary attributes 1 Identity validation: is the provided identity
allows other providers, known as secondary IDPs, to document or number genuine or valid?
build on the primary attributes with attributes of their
2 Identity verification: does the provided data of the user
own. Whereas primary IDPs are almost invariably
match the identity on record of the digital identity?
government agencies, secondary IDPs are usually not.
3 Identification authentication: does the identity
provided in fact belong to the user providing it?
9 Bangladesh has recently achieved the status of ‘lower-middle-income’ country and has set the goal of becoming a middle-income country by 2020.
10 Digital Identity: Towards Shared Principles for Public and Private Sector Cooperation, GSMA and World Bank, 2016
Introduction 7
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
Many identification processes around the world fail on This process is both time consuming and costly and
the first and second levels to validate and verify the would be more efficient if other sources of data were
identity, let alone check whether the identity provided used for verification. For example, a mobile operator
is that of the user providing it. For example, before could verify whether details provided by the driver’s
2018, users could register SIM cards in Indonesia by MSISDN (Mobile Station International Subscriber
completing a self-registration process when activating Directory Number)11 matched those they provided to
the SIM. The mobile operator’s entity registering the Uber. For online payment providers, mobile operators
SIM undertook no verification of the data entered. In can enhance the verification process by providing
this instance, the identity captured by the operators contextual information available in its network to
as the secondary IDP was open to falsification, so any assess the level of fraud risk. For example, is the device,
subsequent authentication of the identity by customer represented by the SIM, in its usual location? To check
care was neither efficient nor possible. for abnormal behaviour, has the user frequently changed
the SIM? And to enhance confidence, how long has the
Ironically, in the physical world, the identity is rarely user been a customer of the mobile network?
validated; for example, a bank takes a copy of a
passport without validating whether the passport is Similar concepts exist in the digital world where mobile
fake and relies on the passport matching other forms network operators use primary identity providers such
of provided ID such as proof of address. In the online as the Aadhaar system in India to register SIM cards
world, commercial service providers try to reduce and establish a secondary identity. In India, the mobile
the risk of fraudulent transactions or interacting with operators maintain a copy of the registered Aadhaar
false identities by seeking multiple, credible sources identity for each SIM card and have the ability to
to match identity data and/or add attributes to add attributes to that identity if they expose it to a
complement known data. For instance, when a person third party.
in Pakistan registers to be an Uber driver, Uber sends
a person to the registered address to verify the data In the digital world, for authentication, it is relatively
provided online and to check with neighbours that the easy to verify whether an identity is true. Verifying
person is who they say they are. whether the identity provided belongs to the
user providing it requires a secure and robust
authentication mechanism that needs to be able to
verify that the user is the owner of the identity.
1213
Level of Level of
assurance confidence Type of authentication Example use case
1 Little/no No specific requirement for the Authentication for reading pages on a
confidence authentication mechanism newspaper website
2 Some Single Factor – “Something I have” Authentication for update of a record
confidence such as change of address on a website
3 High Two Factor – “Something I have” and Authentication for online access to a
confidence “Something I know” or “Something I am “ brokerage account
4 Very high Multifactor +PKI12 – “Something I have” For services where there is a potential
confidence and “Something I know” and “Something for high risk of harm in the case of an
I am “ authentication failure
Source: NIST 13
Introduction 8
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
The increasing complexity of digital lives requires the in the absence of national privacy laws, governments
development of ever more comprehensive and secure tend to regulate operators to protect the privacy
systems for authentication. The challenge is therefore of their customers. Together with Mobile Connect,
to deliver the full spectrum of digital economy services operators work in a regulated framework for identity
and protect users’ privacy and security online. Mobile and authentication, with services delivered over a
Connect offers a valuable framework for achieving this secure network. By contrast, governments do not
goal. From the perspective of identity, governments regulate the identification practices of internet players
regulate mobile operators as the providers responsible such as Facebook and Google, which often have
for registering SIMs against the government system limited or no obligations for authenticating their users.
for verifying primary identity. For authentication, even
Box 2
or or
click ok
Something Something Something
I have I have I have
+ + +
Something Something Something
Something I know I am I know
I have +
Something
LOCALLY VERIFIED I am
Something
I know
Introduction 9
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
3 Digital societies
landscape in
Asia Pacific
Governments throughout Asia Pacific understand the importance
of digital identity and are developing digital identity solutions, often
in cooperation with the private sector. Cooperation is not without
its challenges, but the principles for successful partnerships are
increasingly well understood. Cross-border initiatives are also paving
the way for effective digital trade in the region. Initiatives within
ASEAN offer good examples of regional cooperation.
Figure 1
Connectivity is one of two elements that constitute the supports authentication, authorisation, identity and
foundation of a digital society, allowing companies to attribute sharing or verification for service providers,
distribute, and users to consume, digital applications while putting the user in control of their data. For end
and services. In Asia, digital services function primarily users, it combines the user’s unique mobile number,
through mobile, or “mobile-first” connectivity. This and an optional PIN and/or other authentication
is particularly true of Asia’s emerging economies, as factors for added security, to verify and authenticate
well as remote areas in developed economies, where the user. The combination of mobile device, mobile
connectivity is often “mobile-only” more than “mobile network and operators’ business-process security
first”. Mobile operators are thus uniquely positioned to enables secure and user-friendly services for a wide
play a critical role in the delivery of digital services. range of online use cases, including e-government
services, e-commerce, e-health and payments. It is
An equally fundamental component of a digital based on the principle of ‘privacy by design’.
society is digital identity; without an identity, users
cannot participate in the digital space and reap the Mobile Connect enables the provision of an
benefits of a digital society. Once an individual has authentication experience on a par with best practice
been registered and issued a digital identity, mobiles in the private sector, using mobile technology to
and other connected devices can be used to verify leapfrog legacy infrastructure and economic barriers
and authenticate that identity, and allow access to to delivering secure digital identity programmes. For
a variety of online transactions and services. Mobile governmental organisations, Mobile Connect can
operators and public sector players can achieve a lot in deliver flexibility, real-time access to information,
cooperation with each other. assured interaction with citizens and multi-function
digital identity, while reaching the required levels
For example, GSMA’s Mobile Connect14 is a global, of security for robust mobile identity issuance and
open and common framework developed by the authentication. Mobile Connect is available to 470
GSMA in cooperation with leading mobile operators. million users in Asia Pacific across 31 operators.
Through a single consistent interface, Mobile Connect
Singapore is further along in its digital identity distribution of smart ID cards was slower than expected
scheme having overhauled its SingPass and CorpPass due to problems with systems integration.
programmes to provide improved security and better
integration with a range of existing and forthcoming A common aim of these national programmes is for a
services, including real-time payment authentication digital ID to reduce instances of forgery – particularly
tied to a mobile number, and the use of shared voter fraud – by relying on various biometric features.
services, such as bicycles, cars, lodging and drones. In Bangladesh, the Identification System for Enhancing
Access to Services (IDEA) heralds the beginning of
Indonesia represents a progressive adopter of electronic a change of culture towards efficient and effective
identity credentials and technologies after launching delivery of public services, with the joint aim of
its ambitious e-KTP (Kartu Tanda Penduduk elektronik, removing instances of fraud, as exemplified by the
or Resident Identity Card) programme in 2011. The discovery of 50,000 fake documents in 2014. The
country rapidly scaled up enrolment in the programme Indonesian government claims that e-KTP credentials
to 100 million people during its first year and 140 million are virtually impossible to forge and consequently
by 2012. However, difficulties in procurement and a should not be subject to misuse by criminals and
corruption scandal have hampered e-KTP’s national terrorists, who have been known to evade capture by
rollout, causing shortages and extended delays. using multiple, counterfeit ID cards.
In Japan, initial progress with the production and
Box 3
1516171819
Box 4
2122
Bangladesh Japan
In 2016, the Bangladesh government launched a All government information systems in Japan use
mobile app, Alapon, to facilitate secure information a cloud-based Public Certification Service platform
exchange and communication between the for verification of identities to allow seamless
country’s 1.4 million government officials. access between systems, except for those
Messaging, online voice and video calls, file and information systems with special requirements.
location sharing, and a mobile directory are among Public agencies at the national and local levels can
the app’s features that help to connect government track and share information, avoiding problems
officials across agencies and departments via a such as inaccurate payments or duplication of
single platform. 21 The government notes that better administrative processes, and breaking down
communication within the public sector is key to vertical divisions within agencies. These efforts
achieving higher standards of government services. have also reduced operational costs to improve the
security and disaster resilience of governmental
Australia and citizen data.
20 For example, the UK government saved around £3.56 billion over the three years to 2015 from the digitisation of public services on the ‘gov.uk’ platform.
See “How digital and technology transformation saved £1.7bn last year”, Government Digital Service, October 2015
21 "Govt. unveils REVE developed Alapon app for employees", REVE Systems, September 2016
22 "Australia Post delivers on Digital iD", The Mandarin, July 2017
Box 5
Pakistan Thailand
Pakistan was an early developer of a national ID card, Thailand is undertaking several initiatives to
operated by NADRA. A series of initiatives dating become a digital and smart economy. In late
back to 2009 have emerged to link mobiles to digital 2017, the country announced plans to make the
identity, such as Telenor’s EasyPaisa which uses the submission of biometric information mandatory for
SIM to connect to, for example, the Bank of Punjab’s the registration of all new SIM cards. 27 Meanwhile,
branchless banking services through its Biometric efforts to encourage cashless payments have
Verification System (BVS). When integrated with the increased. Mobile operators offer money transfer
NADRA ID card, the service became a smartcard services, such as TrueMoney, 28 and in January
(from 2012 onwards) as part of the National Financial 2017 the Bank of Bangkok launched PromptPay as
Inclusion Strategy.25 Branchless banking is forecast to part of Thailand’s National e-Payment Initiative. 29
rise rapidly from 17 million accounts in 2016 to 20–30 Through PromptPay, customers can transfer
million in a matter of years.26 funds using a recipient’s mobile number or
national ID number without the need for bank
An initial four-month pilot by Telenor in 2015 in account numbers. 30 A gap continues to exist
collaboration with UNICEF, and supported by the between objectives and fulfilment, but as digital
GSMA, saw birth registration rates increase by an communications improve so will the quality and
average of 200%. This included a 300% increase scope of services.
in Sindh province and 126% in Punjab. The current
phase of the project seeks to register 700,000 Moving towards a more digital economy and society,
children by the end of 2018. As of February 2018, the in February 2018, the Electronic Transactions
project had successfully reported 77,000 new births. Development Agency (ETDA) partnered with Omise,
23 Estonia, Finland and Moldova have all partnered with operators to deliver mobile authentication services to eID cardholders. In each case, the mobile companies issue users with
a PKI-enabled SIM, and then charge a per-use fee when they use a digital signature to authenticate themselves for e-government and other online services.
24 Digital Identity: Towards Shared Principles for Public and Private Sector Cooperation, GSMA and World Bank, 2016
25 "Financial development and inclusion”, Business Recorder, July 2017
26 “Pakistan on road towards digital economy”, The Nation, January 2018
27 "Thailand to roll out biometric checks for SIM cards nationwide", Reuters, November 2017
28 Building Thailand’s Digital Economy and Society, GSMA, 2015
29 "New mobile payment system launched in Thailand as part of National E-payment initiative", OpenGov, October 2017
30 "Thailand rolls out PromptPay money transfer service", Nikkei Asian Review, January 2017
Thailand continued
Singapore
a Japanese blockchain-based start-up, to initiate In 2017, Singapore announced the creation of a new
the National Digital ID project. This aims to build Data Innovation Programme Office to develop a
a national eKYC (electronic Know Your Customer) private sector data portal similar to data.gov.sg –
portal to encourage online transactions for both the one-stop portal for free government datasets.
private and public sectors with more standardised The private sector data portal will provide a secure
methods of verification and authentication.31 platform for companies to share data in a way that
Thailand is expecting to see more of these private allows them to seize opportunities in the digital
partnerships in the near future and to encourage economy. Data such as goods delivery schedules
involvement from all sectors. and consumer traffic in malls could provide valuable
input into data analytics to help companies detect
trends and patterns that could in turn be used to
develop innovative products and services.
Box 6
3334
Regional cooperation
31 "ETDA Thailand initiates National Digital ID project to promote online transactions", OpenGov, February 2018
32 International organisations such as the OECD, World Bank and World Trade Organization have supported several digital identity initiatives. For example in 2011, a $195 million
concessional credit was approved for the Identification for Enhanced Access to Services (IDEAS) Project to help the government of Bangladesh in developing a reliable and
accurate national identification system.
33 Identity for Development in Asia and the Pacific, ADB, 2016
34 Distributed Ledger Technologies for Developing Asia, ADB, 2017
3536373839
Association of Southeast Asian and public authorities. The eIDAS regulation ensures
Nations (ASEAN) that people and businesses can use their own
national electronic identification schemes (eIDs) to
In November 2017, payment systems operators access public services in other EU countries where
from five ASEAN countries signed a memorandum eIDs are available.
of understanding to enable real-time cross-border
payments. Singapore and Thailand are already In February 2018 in partnership with the European
discussing connecting their national digital payment Commission and more than 10 other organisations,
systems.35 This would bring together two platforms, the GSMA completed the second phase of a Mobile
Singapore’s PayNow and Thailand’s PromptPay, Connect and eIDAS pilot. Its primary goal was to
which allow peer-to-peer transfers via banks and determine how Mobile Connect, in combination
enable payments to be made using recipients’ with eIDAS, can verify individuals’ identities and
mobile phone or national identity card numbers. their entitlements for access to cross-border health
services. The trial’s jointly issued report38 provides a
Australia and Indonesia number of insights into operating within the eIDAS
framework and recommendations as to how Mobile
Part of Australia’s $296 million economic
Connect can facilitate new services.
partnership with Indonesia includes working
together to pilot the use of digital governance
The GSMA estimates that eIDAS will create an
and collaboration in e-government, online service
addressable market for authentication, authorisation
delivery platforms, analytics and digital identity.
and attribute services of about $2.5 billion by
In February 2018 at the inaugural Indonesia-
2022.39 The pilot highlighted how leveraging Mobile
Australia Digital Forum, the discussion centred on
Connect and the eIDAS Regulation, together with
digital opportunities between business, research
European member states’ investment plans for
institutions and government.36
identity initiatives, could drive large-scale take-up
of secure and reliable digital identity management
eIDAS and the EU solutions beyond username/password and
In July 2014, EU member states adopted regulation smartcard-based approaches. The completion of
on electronic identification and trust services the pilot is an important step towards developing
for electronic transactions in the internal market a strategic action plan for mobile operators’ assets
(eIDAS).37 The regulation came into force in July to accelerate the development of a secure and
2016 and aims to provide a predictable regulatory trustworthy digital identity ecosystem, which in turn
environment to enable secure and seamless could allow the delivery of healthcare and other
electronic interactions between businesses, citizens public sector services enabled by IoT.
35 "Singapore, Thailand Weigh E-Payment Alliance in Digital Push", Bloomberg, October 2017
36 "Indonesia and Australia: Partners for the Digital Age", Australian Embassy, Indonesia, February 2018
37 For more information, see http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2014.257.01.0073.01.ENG
38 Mobile Connect for Cross-Border Digital Services: Lessons Learned from the eIDAS Pilot, GSMA, 2018
39 https://www.gsma.com/identity/eidas
4 Benefits of
digital identity
The benefits of well-developed digital identity programmes to the
economy as a whole, to consumers and society, and to governments
are well documented. Even in an individual country such as Australia
or Indonesia, studies show a digital identity programme potentially
increases GDP and leads to savings of billions of dollars. Digital
commerce is a major driver of economic benefit, leading to increased
convenience for consumers and job creation. Consumers also
benefit by participating in a full digital lifestyle, including through
better education and training via digital platforms. Society as a
whole benefits: better healthcare and improved financial inclusion
are just two examples. In developing countries, a digital identity is a
prerequisite for achieving the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs). Digital government is crucial to achieving these benefits.
Box 7
414243
For companies, consumers with digital identities can: • help focus marketing efforts
• increase efficiency through greater participation • become targets for highly personalised products.
options in everything from integrated payroll and
A well-developed digital identity programme means
benefits to collaborative online workflow
that such benefits are not confined to any one specific
vertical sector but occur across industries.
40 A frictionless future for identity management: A practical solution for Australia’s digital identity challenge, Australia Post, 2016
41 Digital Australia: Seizing Opportunity from the Fourth Industrial Revolution, McKinsey & Company, 2017
42 https://www.dta.gov.au/what-we-do/policies-and-programs/identity
43 Unlocking Indonesia’s digital opportunity, McKinsey, 2016
Box 8
51
CPTPP
Among the CPTPP’s objectives lies a core purpose Vietnam. For example, according to Viet Capital
to develop the seamless flows of goods, services Securities research, Vietnam's domestic and
and investment regionally, with a particular focus foreign-invested firms are expecting an increase
on data and electronic commerce. This means in exports from the CPTPP.51 Research shows
methods by which to move people, products, that there is a high compliance cost to non-tariff
services and money must accelerate among the barriers – the time and money to process border
CPTPP’s 11 signatory countries of Australia, Brunei clearance. A trusted identity system that works
Darussalam, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, across the CPTPP member countries will alleviate
Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and much of the bottleneck.
44 https://www.worldpaymentsreport.com/#non-cash-payments-content
45 I.e. electronic transactions performed on mobile phones.
46 “Digital economy takes off in Southeast Asia as the number of connected consumers surges 50 percent in the last year to 200 million”, Bain & Company, May 2017
47 “e-conomy SEA: Unlocking the $200B Digital Opportunity”, Google and Temasek, May 2016
48 See PS PT 012: https://www.bot.or.th/English/Statistics/PaymentSystems/Pages/StatPaymentTransactions.aspx
49 "Singapore wants to be Asia’s Sweden in push for cashless payment”, Bloomberg, August 2016
50 "Real time payments system delayed to 2017", The Australian Financial Review, December 2014
51 “World Bank assesses impacts of CPTPP on Vietnam’s economy”, VietCapital Securities, March 2018
In addition, enabling interoperability of the identity and payment trust systems of, for example, Singapore’s
PayNow system and Australia’s similar mobile number payment system would expedite peer-to-peer transactions
and reduce the time it takes for businesses to get paid, including across borders.52
Box 9
53545556
52 “Australians to transfer money using only mobile number or email in 2017: RBA”, ZDNet, September 2016
53 Unlocking the digital potential of Pakistan’s e-commerce industry, GSMA, 2018
54 "Mastercard helps expand financial inclusion in Pakistan by optimizing National ID cards with e-payment functionality", Mastercard, January 2017
55 "NADRA Likely To Revive Money Transfer Accord With MasterCard", ProPakistani, October 2017
56 "5 Things You Didn't Know You Can Use Your MyKad For", Lite
4.2 Consumers
The combination of smartphone technology and digital and the expanding apps ecosystem make it a suitable
identity enables people to transform the way they medium for interacting with a variety of services and
work, communicate and play, participating in a full processes with real-time verification.
digital lifestyle. According to GSMA research, mobile
phone ownership, supplemented with internet access, Trust is cited as a key barrier to adoption of
is associated with an improvement in peoples’ lives, as e-commerce. For consumers, trust relates to a
shown by increases in average life evaluations and net number of aspects of being online; security of a
positive emotions.57 personal identity or fear of identity theft are major
factors. Service providers fear the risk of fraudulent
The smartphone is still the hub of an individual’s digital transactions: this barrier can be addressed by
experience,58 and is the one device that people have increasing trust in the robustness of the consumer
with them at all times. Its increasing functionality, such identity provided.
as embedded sensors for biometric identification,
Box 10
59606162
Enriching lives and lifestyles with digital services enabled by a digital identity
Indonesia Malaysia
Jakarta is notorious for its heavily congested Malaysian telco Digi’s Video Freedom offers
streets where commuters typically spend 3–4 customers the option of purchasing hourly or daily
hours per day in traffic jams. Looking to address passes to stream video content on their device
this challenge, the Jakarta city administration, for less than MYR5 without it counting towards
since 2014, has worked with various mobile app their internet allowance. Digi works with both
providers, including Google Waze, to provide real- international and local partners including YouTube,
time information and updates to commuters on iflix, Viu, Astro Go, Netflix and Twitch.
public projects, ongoing construction and planned
57 GSMA-commissioned survey in 142 countries: The Impact of Mobile on People’s Happiness and Well-Being, GSMA, 2018
58 The range of mobile devices has surged over the last decade on exponential growth of apps and cloud-based services and includes mobile phones, tablets and wearables
(e.g. smart watches).
59 Unlocking the digital potential of Pakistan’s e-commerce industry, GSMA, 2018
60 "Jakarta Joins Forces With Waze on Traffic Updates", JakartaGlobe, November 2014
61 "Indonesia: Jakarta city authorities to work with Waze", Telematics News, November 2014
62 "Waze to adapt navigation to Jakarta's odd-even license plate policy", The Jakarta Post, August 2017
4.3 Society
The social benefits from digital identification of individuals are extensive and include wider access to healthcare,
education and financial services.
4.3.1 Achieving universal healthcare from Asian governments for its potential to fill
chronic shortages of hospital beds and healthcare
Identification is necessary for a medical practitioner professionals. Indonesia, for example, had just 0.2
to administer the appropriate medication and level of physicians and 0.9 hospital beds per 1,000 people
care based on a patient’s health records and medical in 2012.63 The World Health Organization (WHO)
history, while an individual’s access to state subsidies predicts that by 2030, there will be a global shortage
also hinges on the ability of healthcare providers to of 18 million healthcare professionals.64 Remote
verify eligibility. The digital aspect of identification monitoring and real-time video or voice conferencing
is necessary to improve the quality of healthcare by are examples of how digital healthcare can maximise
allowing such information to be shared across public the effectiveness of the healthcare system without
and private institutions via electronic health records, demanding further labour resources from medical
and will be a crucial building block in any country that practitioners; digital identification is central to the
wants to implement a universal healthcare scheme. provision of digital healthcare services. At the same
time, however, sharing medical records heightens
Digital healthcare is also receiving urgent attention privacy concerns, which we consider in Chapter 5.
Box 11
65
Singapore
The Ministry of Health’s HealthHub is a one-stop and implementing innovative technologies in the
online portal for Singapore citizens and permanent healthcare sector. Key initiatives include: 1 Queue 1
residents who can log in to check their latest health Payment (1Q1P), an integrated queue and payment
records, make appointments at public healthcare system that optimises patients’ appointments and
facilities, and access personalised information payments. The Outpatient Pharmacy Automation
“to lead a healthier lifestyle”. HealthHub is System enables pharmacies to handle high
available via web and mobile app, and can be prescription loads safely and efficiently, and the
accessed by logging on to the national digital Smart Health Video Consultation system, which
authentication system, SingPass. The Integrated leverages video conferencing technology, enables
Health Information Systems (IHiS), a subsidiary of remote consultations.65
the Ministry of Health, is in charge of developing
63 https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SH.MED.BEDS.ZS?locations=ID
64 Global strategy on human resources for health: Workforce 2030, WHO, 2016
65 See IHiS: www.ihis.com.sg/Project_Showcase/Healthcare_Systems
4.3.2 Delivering greater still financially excluded. By contrast, more than 83%
of the world’s population have access to 3G mobile
financial inclusion
connectivity, and two thirds have access to 4G.67
Combining digital identity with mobile technology can
change the landscape of financial inclusion. According Non-banks, such as mobile operators, are playing a
to the World Bank’s Global Findex, in 2017, 1.7 billion key role in Asia, facilitating digital payments and user
adults globally were unbanked.66 In Southeast Asia, authentication, and accelerating the digital commerce
the proportion of the adult population with an ecosystem through partnerships with service providers
account at a financial institution or a mobile money and financial investments. For example, there are
account increased from 60% to 71% between 2014 now more than 235 million registered mobile money
and 2017. However, more than 850 million adults are accounts in South Asia, representing a third of
registered mobile money accounts globally.68
Box 12
697071
Financial inclusion
Bangladesh Pakistan
In June 2015, Bangladesh announced it had
In Pakistan, mobile money providers (or
joined the Better Than Cash Alliance to accelerate
‘branchless banking’ service providers) are
its transition from cash to digital payments.69
extending the reach of mobile financial services
In addition to driving e-commerce, this will
to people outside the traditional banking system.
support greater financial inclusion by digitising
By the end of 2014, 9 million people, representing
social welfare payments to citizens, fees that
7% of Pakistan’s adult population, had used peer-
citizens make to the government for services,
to-peer (P2P) transfers or bill payment services
and domestic and international remittances. The
offered by branchless banking operators at least
agency in charge of this, Access to Information
once. As well as P2P transfers, the industry has
(a2i), is using mobile phones to connect unbanked
delivered various government-to-person (G2P)
citizens to financial services. For example, a2i has
campaigns such as the Benazir Income Support
partnered with bKash, a mobile financial service
Programme and Internally Displaced Persons
provider, to allow rural customers to deposit cash
payments, with the total value of transactions
or send money using text messages.70
equivalent to 3.5% of the country’s GDP.71
66 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/187761468179367706/pdf/WPS7255.pdf#page=3
67 The Mobile Economy 2018, GSMA, 2018
68 2017 State of the Industry Report on Mobile Money, GSMA, 2018
69 "Making Digital Bangladesh Vision 2021 a reality, Government joins the Better Than Cash Alliance", Better Than Cash Alliance, June 2015
70 "Seriously, Bangladesh is the country to beat on e-payments", GovInsider, May 2017
71 Building digital societies in Asia: Making commerce smarter, GSMA Intelligence, 2015
4.3.3 Providing identities for refugees Mobile providers can leverage unique resources
to make registration processes more secure and
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees efficient, improve cross-organisational data sharing,
(UNHCR) estimates that there are more than 65 and establish digital identities for verification anytime,
million forcibly displaced persons (FDPs) worldwide.72 anywhere. This presents new opportunities to work
FDPs are less likely than other migrants and foreign with humanitarian agencies to better understand the
nationals to possess proof of identity, which may have needs and potential of refugee populations and the
been forgotten, lost, destroyed, stolen in transit, or obstacles they face in using mobile services. Such
purposefully left behind.73 FDPs face identity-related partnerships can also lead to positive outcomes
barriers that contribute to instances of exclusion and for host governments and local communities due
limit their access to mobile connectivity, financial to reduced reliance on state resources, reduced
services, education, healthcare and employment. risks of financial exclusion, strengthened financial
integrity, and increased economic activity in local host
communities.74
Box 13
72 http://www.unhcr.org/uk/figures-at-a-glance.html
73 Refugees and Identity: Considerations for mobile-enabled registration and aid delivery, GSMA, 2017
74 Ibid.
Box 14
7677
Pakistan Indonesia
Telenor Pakistan, in partnership with UNICEF, has Since 2015, child development organisation Plan
developed a mobile solution to digitally register International has been working with the Ministry of
births. Birth registration details are reported Home Affairs (MoHA) to identify ways to increase
through authorised community members such as the coverage of birth certificates in Indonesia.77
health workers and marriage registrars, or through As part of the Medium Term Development Plan
Telenor Pakistan’s agent network using an Android 2015-19, Indonesia’s president has set a target
app. The collected data automatically populates of 85% of children to have a birth certificate by
a web-based dashboard, providing government the end of the period. One social protection
ministries with real-time information on reported programme is therefore using a mobile app
and registered births and up-to-date information to complete birth registration and marriage
on the status of each application.76 certification. SIAK, MoHA’s population database,
validates the application using the unique ID
numbers of the parents, which then triggers the
creation of an identity card number as well as a
birth certificate for the child.
4.4 Government
As government activities become more digitised, government activities and expenditure. In the formal
digital citizenry – including the need for individuals to sector, digitising linked invoices for sales taxes such as
prove their identities digitally – increasingly becomes VAT and GST via, for example, blockchain technologies
a prerequisite for effective societal participation. has the potential to eliminate missing trader fraud – one
Government actions determine the benefits of digital of the world’s largest sources of tax fraud and one of
inclusion and the adverse consequences of digital the biggest causes of lost government revenue.79
exclusion.78
From an individual’s perspective, a digital identity acts
Digital identities can create an opportunity for the as a gateway to enable faster and easier interaction
state to broaden the revenue base – a critical need in with the state, which, when underpinned by the
many developing countries – by bringing previously existence of a secure legal framework incorporating
undocumented citizens and informal businesses into appropriate checks and balances, also helps address
the ‘tax net’, and by increasing trust in public services concerns over privacy when accessing sensitive
administration among citizens through improved material, such as medical or tax records.
transparency, accountability and communication of
75 World Bank ID4D
76 Innovations in mobile birth registration: Insights from Tigo Tanzania and Telenor Pakistan, GSMA, 2017
77 Birth registration for all in Indonesia: A Roadmap for Cooperation, Plan International, 2016
78 Governments also need to address the potential side effects of exclusion. As more services become available online, there is a need to support digital literacy, including for
senior citizens in developed countries. Singapore, for example, has recognised this need as one of the pillars of its Smart Nation programme.
79 See, for example, A VATCoin Solution to MTIC Fraud: Past Efforts, Present Technology, and the EU’s 2017 Proposal, Boston School of Law, 2018
Box 14
8081828384858687
E-government services
Bangladesh Malaysia
Bangladesh is connecting 18,500 government Public sector transformation using ICT is laid out in
offices and creating a mobile-optimised, integrated the Public-Sector ICT Strategic Plan (2016-2020),
service delivery platform, supported by Access 2 which targets the transformation of public service
Information (a2i). An example of this programme delivery by 2020. Spearheaded by the Malaysian
is the Department of Environment’s Environmental Administrative Modernisation and Management
Clearance Certificate Application System, which Planning Unit (MAMPU), the plan outlines key goals
anyone can access anywhere at any time. The on digital, data, cloud and cyber security. Certain
entire processing system can be tracked, and government services will be offered only digitally,
when the certificate is ready, a notification SMS with the expectation that the vast majority of
and email are sent with the address of the office access will occur via mobile, from citizens with IDs
for collection. As a result, 200% more applications able to access the services. The government also
were submitted within seven months of launch. intends to enable and promote online payments,
Alongside this is a Digitizing Implementation with 19 agencies to offer mobile payments by
Monitoring and Public Procurement project to 2020. MAMPU will look to encourage broader use
place government procurement online.80 As part of of data in government, with analytics to improve
its 7th Five Year Plan (2016–2020), the government digital delivery, and a dedicated platform built for
set a target of increasing public institution usage government agencies to share data and internal
of e-procurement from zero in 2014 to 100% service access with each other.85
by 2020.81 Such an increase would enable the
government to realise cost savings of up to 13.5% Singapore
in public good provision.82
In Singapore, the Digital Readiness Programme
Office is helping citizens access various
Indonesia
government services digitally. Online services
Since 2014, citizens in Jakarta have used the Qlue include a revamped SingPass, which uses
app to provide feedback to the city government.83 two-factor authentication via mobile phone to
Through their mobile phones, citizens can take authenticate access, a digital vault MyInfo for
pictures, upload photos and report a problem to storage of personal details so users need not
the government, which in turn forwards the case to repeatedly provide and verify their personal
the relevant local authorities to follow up. Users can information when transacting online,86 and the
monitor the progress and status of their report, while eCitizen portal for access to all e-government
officials also upload a photo of the reported location services and transactions in a secure manner.87
once they complete their response.84 The service has To date, 1,600 government services have been
now expanded to six other cities in Indonesia. made available digitally.
80 "Big bucks for ICT to boost Digital Bangladesh plan", theindependentbd.com, June 2017
81 Seventh Five Year Plan, FY2016 – FY2020, General Economics Division (GED), Planning Commission, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh, 2015
82 Birth registration for all in Indonesia: A Roadmap for Cooperation, Plan International, 2016
83 "Open Data Brings Change to Indonesia", World Bank, January 2017
84 "Monitoring app Qlue helps Jakarta improve services, efficiency", The Jakarta Post, May 2016
85 The Malaysian Public Sector ICT Strategic Plan 2016-2020, Malaysian Administrative Modernisation and Management Planning Unit (MAMPU)
86 "All SingPass users to be auto enrolled in digital data vault MyInfo by year end", The Straits Times, February 2018
87 For more information, see www.tech.gov.sg/-/media/GovTech/Media-Room/Media-Releases/2014/11/SingPass--Factsheetpdf.pdf
5 Building individuals’
trust in the digital
world
Trust is crucial if citizens are to adopt digital identity services.
Privacy, security and data protection are essential to maintain and
ensure citizens’ trust, but it is important to balance the protection
of personal and sensitive data with the free flow of information that
a digital economy demands. Equally, cybersecurity is essential but
policymakers must ensure that the adopted measures have the least
impact on the digital economy necessary to achieve their intended
results. Failure to do so risks impairing the achievement of the
benefits quantified earlier.
Figure 2
Protecting
consumers
from illegal activity
and anti-social
behaviour
Protecting
networks protecting
and devices
Personal privacy, privacy
to keep security and and securing
communications data protection customer data
secure
Protecting
public safety
and meeting
legal obligations
Source: GSMA
• Based on principles which provide openness Data localisation and data sovereignty requirements
and transparency, offer user choice and control, have the potential to negatively impact growth, foreign
guarantee data minimisation and retention, respect direct investment, social development and economic
user rights, adopt appropriate security measures, productivity.94 A way forward is for privacy and data
and protect children and vulnerable individuals. protection frameworks to be based on internationally
recognised principles, as this can mitigate risks without
• Based on the risk of harm to consumers –
restricting data flows and the benefits they bring.
ensuring the data is used only for its original
Such high-level alignment increases trust between
purpose, implementing security measures such as
countries and allows a coordinated approach. In Asia,
pseudonymisation92 and encryption.
there are two main privacy frameworks: the ASEAN
• Sector and technology neutral – the same data Privacy Framework and the APEC Privacy Framework
privacy rules should apply to the same service and its accompanying systems. While these two
whether provided by a mobile operator or an OTT frameworks already share many of the same principles,
player. IoT services should be covered by general further formal integration and harmonisation of their
data privacy laws. respective approaches could help countries in Asia
Pacific more fully and broadly bridge data protection
• Innovation and investment friendly without being
gaps and reduce inconsistencies across privacy
too prescriptive.
regimes. The GSMA has commissioned a study to
consider these privacy frameworks – at both the
regional and national levels – with the objective to
identify specific steps that can be taken to support the
evolution and convergence of privacy frameworks in
5.1.2 Cross-border data flows Asia. The findings from this study will be published in
September 2018.
Cross-border data flows have grown 45 times in
volume since 2005.93 Privacy regulation should
therefore be light on restrictions of such flows as these
benefit consumers, the economy and society. However,
some countries such as Indonesia and Vietnam
have set cross-border restrictions on data delivery, 5.1.3 Cybersecurity
storage and processing, which prevents firms moving
their citizens’ data to a jurisdiction the government In light of high-profile cyber security incidents (such
interprets to be less strict regarding privacy and as the $81 million Bangladesh Bank cyber-attack in
security. Countries often impose these rules on the 2016), a cybersecurity framework is required to instil
belief that supervisory authorities can more easily trust among users and deter cyber criminals. While
scrutinise data that is stored locally, or that the privacy governments have a legitimate interest in ensuring
and security standards of a country can only be cybersecurity, it is important that cybersecurity does
enforced if the data stays in that country. not become an impediment to the development of a
digital society.
92 Pseudonymisation is a procedure for replacing personally identifiable information with one or more artificial identifiers or pseudonyms
93 Digital Globalization: The New Era of Global Flows, McKinsey Global Institute, 2016
94 Cross-Border Data Flows: Where Are the Barriers, and What Do They Cost?, ITIF, 2017
95 Because it is not possible to delete data from a blockchain, to conform with the EU citizens’ “right to be forgotten”, personal data may need to be stored via links, off chain, or
via other technical means.
96 Estonian blockchain technology: FAQs
97 "Japan developing shared ID system for banks", Nikkei Asian Review, September 2017
98 “Digitalization of government”, Business World, February 2018
99 “Blockchain Market by Provider, Application (Payments, Exchanges, Smart Contracts, Documentation, Digital Identity, Supply Chain Management, and GRC Management),
Organization Size, Industry Vertical, and Region - Global Forecast to 2022”: Research and Markets, 2017
100 See, for example, ‘Forget the Facebook leak’: China is mining data directly from workers’ brains on an industrial scale, South China Morning Post, May 2018.
6 Countries in Asia
Pacific on the
digital society path
Digital identity is the cornerstone of a digital economy: analysing
digital identity in detail only makes sense in the context of an
assessment of the progress made by the countries identified towards
a digital society. Countries with a strong digital identity enabler score
perform better on the digital society path, but generally all countries
surveyed have improved their scores compared to the 2016 GSMA
Digital Societies Report.
For each of the eight focus countries, we have updated against connectivity and each of digital lifestyle, digital
the index from the previous report101 to look at the citizenship and digital commerce. As can be seen from
progress they have made along the digital society Figure 3, aside from Australia, which is in the process
path. The digital society index has four components: of developing a digital identity system, the countries
with the highest digital-identity enabler scores are
• connectivity
performing better along the digital societies path.
• digital citizenship
Looking at the overall digital societies score,103 in
• digital lifestyle
general, all countries have increased their scores
• digital commerce. between 2015 and 2016. Bangladesh and Pakistan
increased their scores the most, with 21% and 13%
In light of the focus of this report, we plot the “digital improvements, respectively. Bangladesh had the second
identity enabler” score, which is a measure of the highest increase in digital identity, after Thailand.
availability and usage of identity and digital identity,102
Figure 3
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Pakistan Bangladesh Indonesia Thailand Malaysia Japan Singapore Australia
The provision of digital identity is causal in promoting By contrast, Australia and Pakistan provide evidence
digital activity. Governments that have focused on of a lag in uptake that can result from the lack of a
either provisioning digital identity as a means of well-deployed national digital ID system. As well as
driving digital economy development (Indonesia, they have performed in developing their overall digital
Thailand) or uniting various identity-enabled society environments, we find both empirical and
programmes (Japan, Singapore) have witnessed anecdotal evidence of how much better those results
corresponding increases in their digital society could have been through a more widely available or
scores. The increase in digital society scores reflects coherent national ID programme.
the increasing ubiquity of access that interoperable
national ID has enabled.
6.1 Connectivity
In most Asian countries, mobile is the main technology Countries towards the left-hand side of the digital
used to access the internet. The availability of high- society chart tend to have limited availability
speed network coverage is fundamental to developing of spectrum, and limited population coverage,
a digital society and is therefore reflected in the particularly 4G, resulting in slower download/upload
connectivity component of the index. Pakistan has speeds. These are fundamental issues to address when
had the highest score increase, at 27%. This has been trying to move towards an advanced digital society.
driven by improved network quality – particularly
lower latency and greater coverage.
Figure 4
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Pakistan Bangladesh Indonesia Thailand Malaysia Japan Singapore Australia
Figure 5
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Pakistan Bangladesh Indonesia Thailand Malaysia Japan Singapore Australia
Of our eight focus countries, Pakistan and Bangladesh of a data protection and privacy framework.
have the lowest digital citizenship scores. Among
the focus countries, Pakistan has the lowest share of Aside from Australia, which is in the process of
population registered and has seen one of the lowest developing a digital identity system for rollout in
increases in the digital identity enabler between 2015 2018,104 all countries have some form of national
and 2016. Bangladesh, by contrast, has seen the identification system. As of 2017, however, there were
strongest growth in digital citizenship. The increase still more than 170 million unregistered people in
was mainly driven by the importance the government the eight focus countries – the majority in Pakistan,
associated with increasing e-government services: Bangladesh and Indonesia.105 Some systems provide
Bangladeshis are today receiving more than 200 greater sophistication, allowing access to multiple
services from more than 4,500 Union Digital Centres. e-services and digital signature, such as in Japan and
Also of note is the increased focus on the provision Malaysia, while some are relatively less advanced
of digital identity and the delivery of services using but still allow access to certain e-services, as is the
identity. Even with a lower absolute digital identity case in Indonesia and Pakistan. To move along the
enabler, Bangladesh has surpassed Pakistan in digital society path, it is important not only to make
terms of digital citizenship. Bangladesh’s score is e-government services available, but also to ensure
still comparatively low because of the limited use of that citizens have the necessary level of digital literacy
e-government services and, most importantly, the lack to use and access these services.
Figure 6
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Pakistan Bangladesh Indonesia Thailand Malaysia Japan Singapore Australia
Bangladesh and Indonesia have seen the highest score path. If users have the means to access different
increases, followed by Pakistan. This has been driven solutions, but the content is limited or not relevant to
by an increase in adoption of smartphones and other them, adoption and the use of more advanced services
connected devices. However, all three countries are will lag. For example, in emerging and transition
still in the high growth phase for smartphone adoption, countries, the number of apps developed per internet
and are relatively nascent in terms of availability of IoT user is low compared to more advanced countries.
compared to other countries. Even if apps are available, they are not always in the
most commonly spoken language, making it more
Availability of local content is another important difficult for people to access them. Basic literacy, and
aspect for countries to move along the digital society digital literacy in particular, is low in South Asia.
Figure 7
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Pakistan Bangladesh Indonesia Thailand Malaysia Japan Singapore Australia
The score for digital commerce in Bangladesh to a GSMA report,111 in 2017 South Asia was the fastest
increased by more than 60% between 2015 and growing region for mobile money, with active112 mobile
2016, and has been driven by an increase in financial money accounts growing by more than 50% to 86
inclusion, both through traditional financial institutions million. Other drivers of digital commerce include the
as well as mobile money services. All developing increase in mobile internet penetration and smartphone
countries among our focus countries have seen a adoption, increased border trade, and the growth in
significant increase in both financial inclusion and trusted payment systems such as debit and credit
online commerce between 2015 and 2016. According cards, quick response (QR) codes and mobile wallets.
107 In Sweden, the proportion of cash payments in the retail sector has fallen from close to 40% in 2010 to about 15% in 2016.
See The Riksbank’s e-krona project Report 1, Sveriges Riksbank, 2017.
108 Payments System Board Annual Report, Reserve Bank of Australia, 2017
109 Social Networks, e-Commerce Platforms, and the Growth of Digital Payment Ecosystems in China: What It Means for Other Countries, Better Than Cash Alliance, 2017
110 Mastercard
111 2017 State of the Industry Report on Mobile Money, GSMA, 2018
112 On a 90-day basis.
7 Moving up the
digital society
value chain
Each of the eight countries has digital society plans, but they vary
considerably. Some plans are comprehensive; others tend to focus
on specific, strategically important sectors of the economy. In terms
of outlook, some plans set out long-term goals, while others are
devoted to short-run aims. A brief description of the plans can be
found in Appendix A. In this section, we provide guidance, based on
their current plans, for governments and policymakers to consider
when building their national digital agenda and how to strengthen,
where appropriate, each of the components of a digital society:
connectivity, digital identity, digital citizenship, digital lifestyle and
digital commerce.
Developing and transition economies need to of a trusted environment for their digital citizenry,
ensure interoperability across different government and in these economies, the focus shifts to promoting
platforms and need to better leverage existing digital frictionless ways of identifying users online and across
identity systems to provide government services different networks. Needing to build and ensure trust
while mapping a path to develop the role of the in such environments will increase as IoT and analysing
private sector. Where countries lack safeguards for data from thousands, if not millions, of connected
data protection, they need to implement the right devices, becomes the norm.
frameworks or ‘smart policies’ for privacy and security.
Advanced economies are further ahead in their pursuit
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Pakistan Vision 2025 is Pakistan’s Mobile broadband (3G Updating e-government Empower more women Create a local ecosystem Increase financial access
113 plan to become a and above) coverage has websites and services through digital literacy for the development by developing money
114
115
prosperous country, increased significantly will enable the programmes. and commercialisation programmes for rural
leveraging digital since 2014, but uptake has government to offer of homegrown apps and and remote populations
Support local language
technologies to achieve remained low.114 As of June more comprehensive and solutions. by leveraging mobile
apps and platform
significant growth and 2016, only 10% of Pakistanis easy-to-access services, technologies to access
development with Continue to encourage
productivity gains in all subscribed to mobile such as interoperable banking services.
government-funded entrepreneurship: the
sectors.113 broadband services. e-government services
incubation programmes. growth of tech hubs in Support SMEs: these
linked to the CNIC, e.g.
Pakistan has made good Pakistan’s mobile sector Pakistan has boosted constitute almost 90%
paying taxes online. Work with industry to
progress in areas such as has significant scope entrepreneurship in the of Pakistan enterprises.
develop local accelerator
mobile money account for development and Work with private sector country. Pakistan has more Work with SMEDA116 and
and incubation
registrations and mobile can support digital organisations to further than 25 tech hubs and the Ministry of Industries
programmes, as well as
connectivity. These early advancement by enable the use of the CNIC Plan9, the largest tech hub, & Production to
learning opportunities for
wins should be coordinated connecting people in to provide digital services has already incubated 118
developers to travel and –– Create conducive and
with applications and underserved rural areas for individuals. start-ups.115
learn from other countries. enabling regulatory
programmes that drive and providing a platform to
Empower women by environment
usage. increase financial inclusion.
fostering the use of digital
–– Develop industrial
Digitisation is still in Pakistan’s National Telecom IDs to give women access
clusters
nascent stages, and will Policy seeks to modernise to direct cash transfers.
require significant focus, the regulatory framework. –– Provide business
not just on ICT policies – It should introduce clearer development services
which is where the focus licensing and competition to SMEs in all areas of
is now – but on a holistic rules, as lack of clarity business management.
and coordinated approach in competition policy
Encourage cross-border
to both industrial and regulation can create
trade – crucial for
economic development and uncertainty for mobile
development of SMEs.
social enablement. operators. Competition
between operators can
encourage investment and
lead to innovation in the
telecoms market.
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Bangladesh To successfully promote Rationalise the licensing Promote robust Adopt whole-of- Develop digital solutions Focus on devising solutions
its national digital agenda, regime to improve identification-validation government approach, for patient data collection, for rural e-commerce
Bangladesh should take investment climate, and processes while adopting combined with open data reporting and telemedicine and low-cost online
into consideration a support quality of service consistent data protection policy, so that organisations to improve quality of transactions.
range of key supporting for the consumer. and privacy frameworks. – both government and records and support
Enable mobile money
factors such as the level of Regulations and related non-government – can remote monitoring and
Create a predictable providers to provide cross-
technology enhancement laws defining the make use of data to add diagnostics.
roadmap for future border and international
and upgrade required, parameters of digital ID value to products and
assignments of spectrum Digitise hospitals and remittance services to
ensuring foreign assistance implementations also need services.
(e.g. 700 MHz), in clinics to allow the use customers.
with development to be in place.
consultation with industry Launch big data initiatives of solutions for remote
priorities and foreign direct Increase uptake and
players. Consider adopting to deliver scalable response patient monitoring, remote
investment, diversifying use of mobile money
flexible and proportionate (e.g. disaster response, diagnostics, health data
its export market, human Reform mobile sector- services by digitising more
approaches towards proof- m-health, connected living management, data security
resource training and specific taxation towards a payment streams – for
of-identity requirements for and others). and imaging.
skill development, and more balanced and efficient example, wage payments
forcibly displaced persons
improving resource structure to increase Open policy development Initiate digital education in Bangladesh’s garment
to be able to access mobile
allocation. affordability of mobile process to citizen input and programmes for all factories.
services, particularly in
products and services. consultation so that policies and bring ICT into the
The government has emergency contexts. Work together with the
can be demand driven and school curriculum and
undertaken key initiatives Include private civil society mobile and internet
Explore the use of new limited resources allocated educational establishments
such as aligning national sectors in connectivity ecosystem to ensure that
digital identity technologies to immediate challenges. to guarantee that citizens
development plans with projects in rural areas. innovation can flourish by
such as blockchain. of tomorrow receive skills
the SDGs, and developing Utilise mobile (and other) encouraging development
Upgrade existing spectrum necessary for the modern
the National ICT Policy and platforms for digital of incubators and opening
licences to technology- economy.
the Perspective Plan of awareness and literacy up APIs to start-ups.
neutral, to facilitate faster
Bangladesh 2010–21. programmes; bring ICT into Promote IoT technology
deployment.
the school curriculum and to enable smart cities and
Ensure timely and partner with trusted NGOs smart mobility that can
affordable release of to deliver hands-on training reduce congestion and
spectrum to facilitate better in digital literacy. collisions, contributing to
quality and more affordable improved safety.
services.
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Thailand Building trust into the Basic connectivity is still Implementation and The MDES’ big data, The NBTC’s plan to regulate To promote and accelerate
foundational policies and a challenge in many rural uptake of the new data centre and cloud OTT services should take digital commerce
programmes of the digital parts of the country. national digital ID project computing committee’s into consideration the opportunities, the EDTA
economy is fundamental. A lack of spectrum should be accelerated by role should be enhanced possibility of adverse should pursue further
availability has been cited creating standardised and to enable partnerships impact on digital lifestyle discussions with regional
Thailand’s digital laws,
by mobile operators as a interoperable data formats with the private sector opportunities. Regulation markets (besides
including the Cyber
key challenge requiring so government entities to explore the use of on OTTs should not stymie Singapore) to link Thailand’s
Security Bill,117 have been
operators to invest more can seamlessly connect, government data. This innovation or prevent both interbank m-payment
criticised as being political
into their networks and exchange and share data. resource sharing could give individuals and businesses system PromptPay to
tools to limit freedom of
raising connectivity costs.118 rise to innovative solutions from accessing innovative other national systems,
speech. Intertwining a Develop a roadmap for
that may help to solve digital products and and to ease cross-border
political agenda into the The sustainability of private sector services that
complex social issues.119 services. transactions.
framework of the digital the government’s Net can leverage the use of
economy will undermine Pracharat project should be the new national digital ID The enforcement of laws
development. considered, and a suitable such as in healthcare and such as the Computer
plan drafted. The project payments. Crime Act, which have been
aims to provide free fibre used as a tool to prosecute
broadband access to political dissidents, interfere
40,432 remote villages by with internet freedom and
the end of 2018. may result in distrust in
the security and privacy of
digital assets.
117 "Thai junta gives green light to bill on mass surveillance", prachatai.com, January 2015
118 Spectrum Auction Risks Leaving Thailand Stranded in a Mobile Data Slow Lane, NERA Economic Consulting, 2017
119 "Big data panel to direct country's digital transition", Bangkok Post, March 2018
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Malaysia Malaysia’s comparatively Malaysia’s mobile Monitor and promote the By 2020, Malaysia’s Vision The digital economy can The establishment of
smaller market means broadband environment Public-Sector ICT Strategic is to achieve a 100% help Malaysian start-ups the DFTZ will improve
that it has to maintain an (speed/cost) has recently Plan (2016-2020) which literacy rate. While the to raise funds through e-commerce in the country
open economy if it is to fallen behind Thailand and, aims to transform public focus of earlier plans was crowdsourcing and P2P and potentially establish
attract foreign investment at one point, Vietnam, service delivery based on on connecting schools lending, as detailed in Malaysia as a regional hub
and foreign participation. due to poor speed and digital technologies, open and equipping them Digital Malaysia which for SME trade. However,
This is particularly true comparatively high cost. data, use of cloud and with computers, smart targets the B40 (Below 40) the platform will need to
in promoting the digital Correcting this and meeting cybersecurity. devices are now the group of households.123 remain open to all players,
society agenda. The the PM’s call for “double communications tool of and the zone will need
Ensure robust security and
DFTZ 120 provides a strong the speed at half the price” choice. to stay competitive with
privacy foundations around
story but needs to remain requires a more robust emerging challenges from
the government’s mobile Malaysia can take a leaf
open to all players if fibre backbone and greater Thailand and Vietnam.
digital identity solution, out of the book of digital
Malaysia is to promote an competition at both the
‘MyIdentity’, to provide natives in the US where The assistance of mobile
inclusive developmental wholesale and retail levels.
convenient digital service websites and mobile apps apps that provide financial
agenda.
The initial ASO, planned delivery, with security, are widely available to templates and calculations
for June 2018, has been privacy and efficiency.122 spread digital literacy and are a digital tool to help
pushed back to enable a to aid both teachers and overcome the main
smooth transmission to students. challenges facing Malaysia’s
DSO.121 No new date has yet venture-capital market,
been announced. e.g. limited funding, risk
aversion, cyclical nature of
the industry and difficulty
to exit.124
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Australia Finalise and release the Ongoing delays, inadequate Implementation of the Continue to provide Government should provide Requirements for the
digital economy roadmap delivery and technology Digital Transformation funding to support science, a supportive environment regulatory fintech
with clear targets and choices for the National Agency (DTA) of Australia’s technology, engineering to leverage benefits of sandbox128 should be
opportunity for industry to Broadband Network (NBN) Trusted Digital Identity and mathematics (STEM) technology and plan for relaxed to ensure flexibility
work together. need to be addressed.125 Framework will ensure skill development, with a disruption of technology and participation of larger
users are able to safely focus on improving digital across all sectors. institutional financial
Establish a coordinating Recommendations
and securely connect literacy, from early learning institutions as well as
agency or mechanism to of the 2015 Spectrum
with government services to higher education, and for unregulated fintech players.
help coordinate across Review Report should be
online.127 older Australians.
relevant government implemented.126 Australia needs to finalise
departments. The development of the Develop platforms and participation in the APEC
digital economy roadmap competitions to encourage CBPR system.129
should incorporate local app development and
components of the Trusted build an ecosystem for local
Digital Identity Framework content apps.
to enable citizens to
connect to both public and
private services.
125 "Australia struggles to deliver national broadband plan", Financial Times, September 2017
126 Spectrum pricing – review, Australian Government Department of Communications and the Arts, 2018
127 "Digital ID another step closer", Australian Government Digital Transformation Agency, February 2018
128 See Australian Securities and Investment Commission: http://asic.gov.au/for-business/your-business/innovation-hub/regulatory-sandbox/
129 APEC Cross Border Privacy Rules public consultation – Australia’s participation, Australian Government Attorney-General’s Department, 2017
Moving up the digital society value chain 46
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Singapore Given the size of its market While Singapore’s Singapore has a number In moving from Singapore has successfully Singapore’s digital
and regional competition connectivity is ahead of of e-Identity frameworks coordination to digitised major portions of commerce ecosystem is
and challenges, Singapore its regional counterparts, in place. A major challenge consultation, a digitally its economy and society. one of the region’s most
needs to look beyond 5G will be a key turning in this area is ensuring empowered Singapore This is partly thanks mature. yet paradoxically
the Hub strategy that point, and Singapore will that private and sensitive needs digitally empowered to strong regulatory it is also one where
has worked in the past, need to align spectrum identity data is secure. Singaporeans. frameworks that attract consumers’ interests rarely
and position itself as an and regulatory frameworks entrepreneurs and reassure come into play. Whether it
The government needs to Singapore’s population
‘economic influencer’. if it is to continue to be investors. is in regulating competition
develop a holistic approach is relatively well-versed
successful. in the sharing economy, or
This will require changing to using digital identity to in all things digital. But as the digital economy
a confusing laissez-faire
its top-down approach interact with the Smart But efforts must be becomes less about
approach to digital services
and adopting a more Nation initiatives. made to strengthen the technologies and more
(the multiplicity of digital
encompassing policy inclusiveness of digital about applications, creative
Many cybersecurity payment offers), Singapore
agenda and more innovation. thinkers will need space to
initiatives have taken shape needs to take decisive
responsive and nimble do what they do. Singapore
these past few years, but As a rapidly ageing society, and consistent stands on
regulatory regime. must enable the conditions
Singapore continues to be Singapore must ensure the consumer interests and
for innovators to be
This means encouraging the target of increasingly elderly are not left behind commercial surety.
innovators, and creators to
the free flow of data, sophisticated attacks, many or forgotten in the digital
be creators.
information and ideas, of which have focused economy. This includes
as well as accepting on theft or sabotage of digital literacy initiatives
that risk and failure are identity. There needs to be that help the elderly avoid
inherent parts of the digital greater focus on adequate common hacking and
economy. cybersecurity protection phishing scams via digital
for digital identity portals.
frameworks to ensure
protection of sensitive data
and interlinked data from
identity.
National digital agenda Connectivity Digital identity Digital citizenship Digital lifestyle Digital commerce
Japan While Japan has While adopting an industry- Japan needs to accelerate Digital literacy programmes Japan can encourage Considering the aging
ambitious digitisation led approach to developing implementation plans should focus on the aging citizens to adopt an population of Japan
plans, the country lacks 5G, Japan should ensure for rolling out digital population, as well as on entrepreneurial mindset leading to labour shortages
a culture of aggressive that interoperability and IDs, learning from the reducing dependency on through social safety nets, among Japan’s SMEs,
entrepreneurship, harmonisation are at the difficulties faced when cash. encouraging innovation further development
with most innovations forefront of the various 5G implementing the and calculated risks rather and promotion of ICT,
Digitisation of the
developed by large technologies, through the MyNumber system. than following the societal automation and robotics
healthcare industry will also
organisations rather than hosting of forums for 5G pressure of securing a can work hand-in-hand
Secure and distributed improve and ensure the
start-ups. stakeholders to discuss and career in a big-name with the use of teleworking
ledger technologies sustainability of the public
share standards. company. capabilities – for example,
While Japan continues to would potentially enable health insurance scheme.
hiring people from remote
develop its digital economy, a reliable and robust Amend the Personal
locations or overseas.130
it should also look to permanent public record of Information Protection Act
develop an independent all transactions and allow (PIPA) to allow the transfer
start-up culture supported access to banking services of personal information
by government grants and across participating outside Japan.
incubators. banks through a common
ID-verification service,
providing increased
convenience to consumers.
130 "Japan Turns To Telework To Expand A Diminished Workforce", Forbes, July 2016
Appendix A
National digital
development plans
Pakistan socioeconomic transformation through ICT and has
the following priorities:
In 2017, Pakistan’s Ministry of Information and
• develop digitally literate human resources
Telecommunications published its Digital Pakistan
Policy 2017, with ICT as an enabler of every aspect of • connect citizens
socioeconomic development. It encompasses four
• take government services to citizens’ homes
areas of implementation: sector digitisation, cross-
sector collaboration, IT-sector sustainability, and • make the private sector more productive and
entrepreneurship and innovation, along with 13 policy competitive.
goals, but no specific targets or timelines.131
The strategy has made progress in all four priorities,
The Pakistan government is focused on improving and particularly in making government services more
the extent, reliability and affordability of broadband accessible via, for example, the launch of a national
connectivity across the country, especially in remote digital identity system. However, the ID system has
areas. Its Universal Service Fund (USF) operates a raised concerns about the amount and security of the
number of “special projects”, including providing ICT collected data in the absence of a robust framework
training for girls and enabling people with disabilities for data protection. In April 2016, hackers stole
to use telecoms services.132 $81 million from Bangladesh’s central bank.134
In recent years, Pakistan and China developed a Long Bangladesh’s Access to Information (a2i) programme
Term Plan for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor aims to improve information quality, widen access and
(CPEC) from 2016 to 2030 to create, inter alia, smart decentralise delivery of public services. A2i has trained
and safe cities across Pakistan, including Islamabad more than 200,000 civil servants and thousands of
and Lahore in 2016. Each project has a smart platform Digital Centre Entrepreneurs to implement e-services
linked to the country’s National Data Centre, and the at 4,500 Union Digital Centres across the country.
aim is to train 2,000 professionals, mainly at Chinese
training centres in Pakistan.133 As part of the Vision 2021 strategy, an Office for Public-
Private Partnership (PPP) facilitates the development
of public infrastructure with the aim of increasing
Bangladesh infrastructural investment from 2% to 6% of GDP.
The Bangladeshi government’s Vision 2021 sees
A lack of fixed-line infrastructure for backhaul and
Bangladesh becoming a middle-income country, with
long-distance transmission hinders the rollout of
poverty eliminated. by 2021 – the 50th anniversary
mobile broadband, as do low rates of digital literacy,
of Bangladesh’s independence from Pakistan. Vision
restrictive policies and high prices, including local
2021 relies on a Digital Bangladesh strategy to bring
taxes, which can account for 30% of basic data
131 "MoIT Releases Digital Pakistan Policy 2017", ProPakistani, August 2017
132 See USF: https://usf.org.pk/
133 "Exclusive: The CPEC plan for Pakistan’s digital future", Dawn.com, October 2017
134 “Bangladesh Introduces ‘Smart’ National Identity Cards”, advox.globalvoices.org, October 2016
packages.135 The country auctioned 4G only in 2018 Indonesia needs to refocus on its electronic identity
and restricts 3G services to the 2100 MHz band. Until card (e-KTP) project and accelerate registration
recently, it prohibited the sharing of mobile base and issuance to equip all citizens with a digital ID for
stations, towers and backhaul facilities. passports, driving licences, SIM card registration,
taxpayer identification numbers, insurance policies, land
To boost connectivity, in 2017 Bangladesh began ownership certificates and other identity documents.
extending a fibre-optic ICT Network to Remote Areas
to connect 25–30% of the population.136 The arrival of A variety of regulations could limit cross-border data
the SEA-ME-WE 5 submarine cable has also doubled flows and hamper the development of Indonesia’s
international bandwidth capacity.137 Bangladesh’s 2017 digital economy. Requirements on data “residency”
budget provides for 12 IT parks and seven IT training such as Reg. No. 82/2012 on electronic system and
centres across the country.138 transaction operation (GR82), and Reg.No. 20 of 2016
on Personal Data Protection in Electronic Systems,
along with proposed requirements to store all data
Indonesia in the country, will limit local SMEs in particular in
terms of undertaking overseas expansion, investment
In August 2017, Indonesia launched a Roadmap
and the interoperable transactions needed by global
for the National Electronic Commerce System for
identity networks.
2017–2019 to grow e-commerce139 to $130 billion
(IDR180 trillion) by 2020, making the country the
largest digital economy in the region.140 The roadmap Thailand
has 31 initiatives across seven sectors: education and
human resources, funding, tax, consumer protection, Thailand’s Digital Government Development
cybersecurity, communication infrastructure, and Plan 2017–2021 plans to digitise all sectors, with
logistics. A decentralised political system often results a focus on agriculture, tourism, education and
in local governments driving such developments public administration.145 The Thailand 4.0 Policy
without the benefit of central coordination. In April focuses on strengthening digital infrastructure and
2018, Indonesia’s Ministry of Industry released the promoting robotics, aviation and logistics, and the
Making Indonesia 4.0 roadmap, prioritising five sectors: digital industry. A 20-year National Strategy to
food and beverage, textile and apparel, automotive, 2036, known as the “6‑6-4” plan, presents six key
electronics, and chemical, with 10 cross-sectoral areas, six primary strategies and four supporting
initiatives. strategies for sustainable development via improved
human capital, green growth and more science and
Indonesia’s 1000 Start-Up Digital National Movement technology. Moreover, a 12th National Economic and
Program aims to foster 1,000 digital start-ups worth Social Development Plan (2017–2021)146 has 10 national
$10 billion (IDR136 trillion) by 2020.141 In early 2018, strategies for strengthening cooperation between
new regulation cut in half a 1% tax on SMEs with annual public and private sectors in R&D investment and
turnover below IDR4.8 billion ($360,000).142 increasing access to and use of technology among
farmers, community enterprises and SMEs.
Indonesia’s National Broadband Plan 2014–2019 aims to
increase broadband and mobile connectivity to all parts For improved broadband connectivity, in 2016, the
of the country’s archipelago.143 To address the problem National Broadcasting and Telecommunications
of last mile coverage, and extend 4G services to remote Commission (NBTC) drafted a five-year master plan
island areas, the government in late 2017 assigned the on the use of new technologies such as 5G and to
2.1 GHz and 2.3 GHz bands to mobile operators.144 encourage sharing of telecoms infrastructure.147 To
increase rural connectivity, the government plans
Malaysia’s Economic Transformation Plan (ETP) of By 2025, the country targets digital technologies to
2010 aims to elevate the country to a per-capita Gross contribute AUD140–250 billion ($81–196 billion) to
National Income of $15,000 by 2020,151 by which time Australia’s annual GDP158 or up to around one sixth of
the digital economy is targeted to contribute 20% to the country’s annual GDP of $1.2 trillion for 2016.
GDP.152 Intervening five-year plans set strategies and
targets based on 12 National Key Economic Areas By 2020, Australia’s controversial and expensive
and six Strategic Reform Initiatives. The National nationwide, broadband fixed-line network, first
eCommerce Strategic Roadmap of Malaysia’s National proposed before 3G in 2007, should connect 8 million
eCommerce Council also aims to double the annual rate people or about a third of the population. However,
of e-commerce growth to more than 20% by 2020. by 2016, 4G mobile services already covered 98% of
the population, making the need for such a network
The Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC) obsolete. Instead, 765 new mobile base stations should
steers foreign digital investments into data centres complete coverage of regional and remote areas under
and cloud computing with the intent of making the country’s Mobile Black Spot Program.159 Australia
Malaysia an e-commerce hub for ASEAN.153 Similarly, plans to deploy 5G from 2020.
the country’s Digital Free-Trade Zone, launched in
November 2017, facilitates cross-border trade in support
Singapore
of local e-commerce businesses.154 In October 2017,
MDEC launched a ‘Cloud First’ strategy to accelerate Launched in 2014, Singapore’s Smart Nation
the adoption of digital technologies in Malaysia. The programme has made Singapore an integrated,
strategy will begin by improving public services, hyper-connected nation. From government services
although the government will then look to encourage to business productivity, the programme has
the private sector’s adoption of cloud technologies.155 encouraged public and private organisations to use
Also in 2017, the Ministry of Health launched the smart technologies to enhance work and lives.160 A
Malaysian Health Data Warehouse as a central system National Digital Identity (NDI) system, to start in the
to house citizens’ health data,156 and Bank Negara second half of 2018, will build on an existing SingPass
proposed a regulatory sandbox to promote fintech system for government services to become a central
services. authentication system for securing individuals’ and
businesses’ private sector transactions.
148 “Thailand targets broadband in all villages by end-2018”, Mobile World Live, May 2017
149 “Education gap too wide for leap to Thailand 4.0”, The Nation, January 2017
150 “Thailand ranks 10th for digital skills in Asia-Pacific”, CIPD, August 2017
151 Overview of ETP, Performance Management and Delivery Unit, Pemandu
152 “Digital economy growth to contribute significantly to Malaysia’s GDP”, New Straits Times, October 2017
153 National Ecommerce Strategic Roadmap, Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC), 2016
154 "DFTZ Goes Live", DFTZ
155 "Plans for cloud-first strategy and national AI framework revealed at 29th MSC Malaysia Implementation Council Meeting", OpenGov, October 2017
156 For more information, see http://www.moh.gov.my/english.php/pages/view/129
157 The Digital Economy: opening up the conversation, Industry Australia, 2017
158 Digital Australia: Seizing Opportunity from the Fourth Industrial Revolution, McKinsey & Company, 2017
159 “Mobile Black Spot Program hits new milestone”, Ministers for the Department of Communications and the Arts, January 2018
160 For more information, see https://www.smartnation.sg/about/Smart-Nation
A 10-year roadmap of the Infocomm Media Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry
2025 plan promotes the use of data, advanced (METI) recently published guidelines on regulating
communications, and computational technologies to the sharing economy, characterised by firms such as
create an ecosystem for continuous experimentation.161 Airbnb and Uber. The guidelines create a conducive
Examples include the Smart Nation Sensor Platform, legal environment to protect both operators and
a nationwide network of sensors, which will enable consumers.168 In January 2018, the government also
connectivity, data and video analytics, and data- said it would incorporate aspects of the sharing
sharing across government agencies.162 As part of economy into its measurement of consumption and
the plan, Singapore’s National Research Foundation GDP.169
is pledging up to SGD150 million ($108 million) over
five years to boost Singapore’s artificial intelligence Japan has only one “unicorn” start-up firm, Mercari –
capabilities.163 an online marketplace, compared to the US with 112
and China with 59, each valued at over $1 billion.170
Singapore’s Info-communications Media Development A lack of investment, a domestic-focused start-up
Authority of Singapore (IMDA), its Smart Nation and market, and a lack of entrepreneurial risk-taking
Digital Government Group, Government Technology account for Japan’s struggle to create digital giants.
(GovTech) Agency, SPRING Singapore, and ‘SMEs Go A similar hesitancy to go digital meant that, in 2016,
Digital Programme’ all help SMEs harness data-driven cash still accounted for 62% of Japanese consumer
technologies to improve productivity.164 Similarly, transactions by value, versus just 10% in South
Singapore’s Committee of the Future Economy supports Korea and 22% in the UK.171 Nevertheless, Japan’s
start-ups in the fast-growing fintech, regtech and government encourages mobile wallets and mobile
healthtech sectors, and in November 2016, the Monetary IDs, through Osaifu-Keitai services, supported by all
Authority of Singapore introduced a fintech sandbox to mobile operators via the de facto Japanese standard,
let companies experiment with innovative products and Sony’s mobile FeliCa ICs. In October 2017, Japan’s
services without excessive regulatory intrusion.165 Financial Services Agency established a FinTech
Proof of Concept Hub to allow fintech start-ups to
In January 2018, Singapore’s parliament introduced a experiment without regulatory constraints.172 Japan is
cybersecurity bill to empower a Cyber Security Agency also the only country to recognise the use of altcoins
to better manage and respond to cybersecurity as legal currency.
threats.166 The parliament is also looking at ways to
tackle fake news.167
Japan
Appendix B
Index methodology
Digital society metrics
There are four main components of a digital society, digital citizenship, digital lifestyle, digital commerce and
connectivity. An index has been built for these components to show the advancement of a country along its
digital society path.
The digital society metrics use a number of indicators across the four components. The overall index gives equal
weight to each of the four components. Each is made up of the following dimensions, number of indicators and
corresponding weighting of indicators:
• Digital citizenship • Digital commerce
–– Availability and usage of identity and digital –– Traditional banking: 4 indicators – 25% weighting
identity: 4 indicators – 50% weighting
–– Financial inclusion: 3 indicators – 25% weighting
–– Provision of public services through digital
–– Transactions: 5 indicators: 25% weighting
channels: 5 indicators – 50% weighting
–– Online commerce: 5 indicators – 25% weighting
• Digital lifestyle
• Connectivity
–– Access and use of smart devices: 2 indicators –
–– Mobile infrastructure: 4 indicators
25% weighting
–– Network performance: 3 indicators
–– Solutions beyond core communications into
consumer IoT: 5 indicators – 25% weighting –– Spectrum: 3 indicators
–– Solutions beyond core communications into –– Other enabling infrastructure: 4 indicators
enterprise IoT: 7 indicators – 25% weighting
–– Locally relevant content online: 8 indicators –
25% weighting
Digital citizenship is measured along two dimensions: proportion of the population that are active social
media users, apps developed per internet user,
• The existence of formal identity systems and
Online Service Index score and the number of
digital identities: whether there is a national
generic top-level domains per capita. Availability
identity system in the country and how many
of content captures accessibility of top Apple Store
people are actually registered. Additionally, this
and Google Play mobile apps, number of apps
looks at digital identity – in particular, if people use
available in the first language of a country and the
it to access online services and if there is a data
proportion of population with accessible apps in
protection and/or privacy framework in place.
their first language.
• The provision of public services through digital
channels: the availability and quality of online and Digital commerce is measured across four dimensions:
e-government services and the extent to which
• Traditional banking: the number of commercial
citizens use them.
bank branches and ATMs per capita, and credit
Digital lifestyle is measured across four dimensions: card and debit card ownership.
• Access and use of smart devices: the smartphone • Financial inclusion: the percentage of adults
adoption rate and share of licensed cellular IoT that have an account (at a financial institution or
connections, as a percentage of total connections. a mobile money account) and the percentage of
population using online banking.
• Solutions beyond core communications into
consumer IoT: IoT connections per capita (or • Transactions: the share of the adult population that
per vehicle/household where relevant) in the has sent or received domestic remittances, paid for
following categories: consumer electronics (smart utility bills, received wages, received government
TV, home entertainment, personal entertainment, transfers and received payments for agricultural
set-top box), smart home (home appliances, products.
home infrastructure, home security and energy
• Online commerce: the percentage of the
monitoring), wearables (fitness trackers and smart
population that has made or received digital
watches), smart vehicles (connected car, connected
payments, the share of adults that have ordered
bike, insurance telematics) and others (trackers for
or purchased goods online and the share of online
children, the elderly and pets; drones; robots).
shoppers. Additionally, it measures the availability
• Solutions beyond core communications into of electronic content in a country.
enterprise IoT: IoT connections per capita in the
following categories: smart city (public transport, Connectivity is measured across four dimensions:
surveillance, electric vehicle charging, street
• Mobile infrastructure: 2G, 3G and 4G network
lighting, parking, waste management), smart
coverage, and the number of years since 3G
utilities (energy, water and gas smart metering,
networks launched.
smart grid), smart retail (points of sale, digital
signage, vending machines, ATMs), smart inventory • Network performance: average mobile upload/
(inventory tracking, monitoring and diagnostics, download speeds and latency.
warehouse management), smart buildings
• Spectrum: Digital Dividend, sub-1 GHz and above-1
(heating and air con, security, lighting, hot desks,
GHZ spectrum used for mobile services per
office equipment), health (remote monitoring of
operator.
medical devices, emergency vehicle infrastructure)
and other (fleet management, applications in • Other enabling infrastructure: access to
agriculture, oil, mining, construction). electricity, international bandwidth per internet
user, the number of secure internet servers per
• Locally relevant content: local relevance and
capita, and internet exchange points per 10 million
content availability. Local relevance captures the
people.
Normalised value = ((actual value – minimum value) / (maximum value – minimum value)) × 100
Once all the necessary values had been normalised, The data was drawn from a variety of sources, such as
the index was constructed as a composite index of the World Bank, United Nations, World Economic Forum,
four components on a 100-point scale according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, UNCTAD, IMF Financial
weightages described in the indicator table above – 1 Access Survey, We are Social, OICA and GSMA
represents the worst situation and 100 the best. This Intelligence. The majority of the datasets comprise
allows us to compare the countries’ scores for each hard, factual data such as smartphone adoption rates
category. To calculate the overall score, the sum of the and some data sources rely on more subjective inputs,
indicators within each component was used, taking such as the UN eGov Index, which assesses different
into consideration the weightage of each indicator. aspects of e-government services.
gsma.com
3
DIGITAL IDENTITIES: ADVANCING DIGITAL SOCIETIES IN ASIA PACIFIC
4