Nine cities have been added to 2014 edition of Networked Society City Index report. Manila is ranked as 8th most improved city in ICT Maturity compared to its 2013 ranking
Key finding: cities with low ICT maturity are improving their ICT maturity faster than high performing cities, indicating a catch-up effect, and a potential for cities to leapfrog by moving straight to advanced mobile technology
The report includes three predictions for the future of cities, around the growth of smart citizens, a redefinition of GDP, and power of collaboration
Ericsson recently published its latest Networked Society City Index. The index ranks 40 cities and measures their ICT maturity in terms of leverage from ICT investments on economic, social and environmental development: the "triple bottom line" effect.
One of the key findings from the report
is the fact that cities with a low ICT maturity tend to be improving their ICT
maturity faster than high performing cities, indicating a catch-up effect. Many
cities also have the opportunity to leapfrog others by avoiding expensive and
increasingly obsolete physical infrastructure and instead moving straight to
innovative applications using advanced mobile technology.
“The current data show a clear
improvement in ICT infrastructure in cities around the world, and Manila was
ranked as the 8th most improved city in terms of ICT Maturity. While it faces
several social, economic and environmental challenges and still has a
relatively low ICT maturity, Manila shows promising improvement rates,” Elie
Hanna, President and Country Manager, Ericsson Philippines and Pacific Islands,
explains. “The city has shown progress
in the ICT dimensions of the index, which include infrastructure,
affordability, and usage. Improvements in ICT maturity must continue so that
the city can enjoy the triple bottom line progress that these improvements have
been proven to create.”
Patrik Regårdh, Head of Ericsson's
Networked Society Lab, explains the importance of ICT in developing cities: “ICT
used to be task of the IT department. Today, when we are seeing so many new
opportunities which are more or less provided by ICT, it evolves to become more
of a general management skill so the way that way we lead different parts of
the organizations and different parts of cities is increasingly built on ICT to
provide efficiency and innovation. ICT adds both efficiency and innovation in
basically all areas of a city, from health care to transport to utilities.”
The top five cities (Stockholm, London,
Paris, Singapore and Copenhagen) remain the same, though Paris has now
surpassed Singapore to take the number three slot. The nine new cities have
been added in this year’s report are Berlin, Munich, Barcelona, Athens, Roma,
Warsaw, Muscat, Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Among these, Munich enjoys the highest
ranking, followed by Berlin and Barcelona.
Also new in this year’s report is the
inclusion of three predictions about the urban future derived from new
technology and ICT solutions and applications:
Smart citizens: People rather than
institutions will drive urban progress to a larger extent, with more open
public services and governance approaches characterizing this power shift.
GDP redefined: By moving toward a more
collaborating and sharing economy, ICT solutions will provide opportunities to
create more value from fewer resources, therefore necessitating an adjustment
of GDP to mirror the values important for a sustainable society.
Power of collaboration: Tomorrow’s
networking organizations will be more flexible and efficient thanks to
collaboration. Therefore the prevailing conditions of city management will also
evolve, requiring changes in legislation and governance,
The Ericsson Networked Society City
Index has been developed in close collaboration with Sweco, the sustainable
engineering and design group.
In addition to the top-three ranking
cities, Stockholm, London and Paris, the following cities are also part of the
index: Abu Dhabi, Athens, Barcelona, Beijing, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Cairo,
Copenhagen, Delhi, Dhaka, Dubai, Helsinki, Hong Kong, Istanbul, Jakarta,
Johannesburg, Karachi, Lagos, Los Angeles, Manila, Mexico City, Miami, Moscow,
Muscat, Mumbai, Munich, New York, Oslo, Rome, São Paolo, Seoul, Shanghai,
Singapore, Sydney, Taipei, Tokyo and Warsaw.
NOTES TO EDITORS
Link to infographic: http://www.ericsson.com/res/docs/2014/networked-society-city-index-2014-infograph.pdf
Link to city profiles: http://www.ericsson.com/res/docs/2014/networked-society-city-index-2014-city-profiles.pdf
Download high-resolution photos and
broadcast-quality video at www.ericsson.com/press
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