Trinidad and Tobago has the number one mobile network population coverage in the world, a survey by the World Economic Forum has said.The Global Information and Technology Report said the fact that there are 135 mobile telephones for every 100 citizens of this country, this country is number one in the world.The report was released at the Arthur Lok Jack Graduate School of Business in Mt Hope yesterday.
Click to download The Global Information Technology Report 2013: Growth and Jobs in a Hyperconnected World
The Network Readiness Index's third pillar is infrastructure and digital content, under which T&T is ranked number one in the category "Mobile network coverage, as a percentage of the population."On hand to receive the good news was TSTT's executive vice president Trevor Deane who said: "That's the difference between coverage and penetration. Penetration is very high. It means everybody who wants a phone can access a phone. It means everybody who wants access to the Internet can have access to the Internet."
He said: "We, as well as our competitors cover most of the country. That is reported, I believe, by the Telecommunications Authority of T&T (TATT). You may not get coverage in some specific areas. You may not get coverage in your house, in a particular bedroom."No network can provide 100 per cent coverage everywhere, wherever you are, all the time. The coverage that we have compares to the first world.
"It's something that's evolving. Every year, we improve our network. Eventually it will be miles better than everyone else. It does need time."Independent Senator Dr Rolph Balgobin said T&T, because of its wealth and highly educated people, is grouped with bigger and more developed countries like Singapore.
Balgobin said T&T fell 12 points because two new countries were added into the survey and they were placed above T&T, in which case, the country fell in real terms by ten places.As for the ten-place slide, Balgobin said it doesn't mean that T&T has gone backward technologically, he said."It just means relative to everyone else, they (everybody else) are progressing a bit faster than we are. This is true throughout Latin America and the Caribbean," he said.
Asked why he thought Barbados (rank 39 out of 144 countries) is so much higher than T&T (72 out of 144) in the overall ranking because of the institutional framework that Barbados has put in place.Their efforts at improving technologies in business, he said, has paid off.Asked if he agreed that persons on a good mobile network would not need two phones, he said: "Exactly. Yes, but again, that's something that we got very wrong."
For example, he said that while sitting on board of the e-business roundtable, he said the state should set up a company, and that the state build the cell towers and allow TSTT and Digicel to co-host."Instead what happened was that TSTT built out a network. Digicel built out a network."Neither of them built out a great network, so what you have is really two networks with two different sets of towers for each side, covering exactly the same area."
He said: "You just need one tower and that could handle the transmitters for both companies on. He said he is an advocate for shared towers but the horse has bolted with that one."Chief executive officer of the National Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Company (iGovTT) Adam Montserin said a new ICT plan is coming as it has been submitted to Cabinet already.
He confirmed that the plan includes clear targets to improve T&T's high-speed broadband internet access but would not share details before the prime minister.Republic Bank executive director Derwin Howell took issue with the ability of the government to come up with nice names like igovtt, fastforward and ttconnect, but not with any action.
Click to download The Global Information Technology Report 2013: Growth and Jobs in a Hyperconnected World