Cover image for Information and Communications for Development 2012 : Maximizing Mobile.
Information and Communications for Development 2012 : Maximizing Mobile.
Title:
Information and Communications for Development 2012 : Maximizing Mobile.
Author:
Bank, World.
ISBN:
9780821395875
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (446 pages)
Contents:
Half Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Part I -- Executive Summary -- Main messages -- Why are mobile phones now considered indispensable? -- A mobile green revolution -- Keep using the tablets-how mobile devices are changing health care -- Mobile money -- Get a phone, get a job, start a business -- Using phones to bring governments and citizens closer -- Onward and upward to mobile broadband -- Appendixes -- Infographic: Maximizing Mobile for Development -- Chapter 1 Overview -- How mobile phones are used -- Data traffic -- The changing mobile ecosystem -- Mobile-enabled social and economic trends -- Structure of the report -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2 Mobilizing the Agricultural Value Chain -- Making information mobile -- Improved access to agricultural information -- Improving data visibility for value-chain efficiency -- Enhancing access to markets -- Policy considerations -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3 mHealth -- Why mHealth? Opportunities and challenges -- The potential of mHealth -- The mHealth ecosystem -- Business models for mHealth -- Principles for implementing mHealth applications -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4 Mobile Money for Financial Inclusion -- Mobile money: an ecosystem approach -- The financial inclusion imperative -- What is the impact of mobile money? -- Growing mobile money: challenges and success stories -- Emerging issues in mobile money -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 5 Mobile Entrepreneurship and Employment -- Open innovation and mobile entrepreneurship -- Mobile incubators -- Mobile microwork -- Mobiles and recruitment -- Conclusions and considerations for policy-makers -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 6 Making Government Mobile -- A typology of mGovernment.

Drivers for mGovernment -- Challenges for governments -- Enabling the technology transformation -- Emerging best practices for going mobile -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 7 Policies for Mobile Broadband -- The mobile broadband opportunity and developing countries -- Policy recommendations for facilitating mobile broadband diffusion -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Part II -- Key Trends in the Development of the Mobile Sector -- Access -- Mobile broadband -- Devices -- Mobile industry -- A mobile analytical tool -- Notes -- References -- Data Notes -- Definitions and data sources -- Mobile at-a-glance country tables -- Key mobile indicators for other economies, 2010 -- Contributors -- Back Cover.
Abstract:
With some six billion mobile subscriptions now in use worldwide, around three-quarters of the world's inhabitants now have access to a mobile phone. Mobiles are arguably the most ubiquitous modern technology - in some developing countries, more people have access to a mobile phone than to clean water, a bank account or even electricity. Mobile communications now offer major opportunities to advance human development - from providing basic access to education or health information to making cash payments and stimulating citizen involvement in democratic processes. This 2012 edition of the World Bank's Information and Communications for Development Report analyzes the growth and evolution of mobile telephony, and the rise of data-based services delivered to handheld devices, including "apps" or smartphone applications. The report explores the consequences for development of the emerging "app economy". It summarizes current thinking and seeks to inform the debate on the use of mobile phones for development. This report looks, in particular, at key ecosystem-based applications in agriculture, health, financial services, employment and government, with chapters devoted to each. It's no longer about the phone itself, but about how it is used, and the content and applications that mobile phones open up. Mobile applications not only empower individual users, they enrich their lifestyles and livelihoods, and boost the economy as a whole. Mobile apps make phones immensely powerful as portals to the online world. A new wave of apps and "mash-ups" of services, driven by high-speed networks, social networking, online crowdsourcing and innovation, is helping mobile phones transform the lives of people in developed and developing countries alike. The report finds that mobile applications not only empower individuals, but have important cascade effects

stimulating growth, entrepreneurship and productivity throughout the economy as a whole. Mobile communications promise to do more than just give the developing world a voice - they unlock the genie in the phone, empowering people to make their own choices and decisions.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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