Showing posts with label economic benefits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economic benefits. Show all posts

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Curbing tech piracy can stimulate Asian economies: report

dvd
A sales assistant arranges compact discs at a stall in a Jakarta mall.
Photo: AFP

SINGAPORE - Asian economies led by China can reap a financial windfall and create hundreds of thousands of jobs in a few years by cracking down on software piracy, an industry study showed Wednesday.

The Business Software Alliance (BSA) and research group IDC said nearly 60 percent of the software programs installed on personal computers in 2009 across the world's largest region were unlicensed.

Reducing software piracy to about 50 percent in four years would produce almost US$41 billion in economic activity, create 350,000 new jobs and generate nearly $9 billion in taxes, according to the joint study.

Achieving the same reduction in two years would boost the economic benefits for the region by another 33 percent, a press statement said.

Worldwide, a cut in piracy rates from the current 42 percent to 32 percent over four years would add $142 billion to the global economy, 500,000 new jobs and $32 billion dollars in tax revenues, the study said.

Roland Chan, BSA's senior regional director for marketing, said the Asia-Pacific region will capture "more than three fifths" of the new jobs forecast be generated globally because of the size of the market.

"Reducing software piracy is an opportunity to inject much-needed stimulus into Asia Pacific economies," he said.

"This study clearly shows that aggressively fighting software piracy today means greater economic benefits tomorrow -- for the region's economy, not just the software industry."

An earlier BSA-IDC report said 900 million software programs were installed on personal computers in the Asia-Pacific region in 2009.

Chan said he hoped the study results would help convince governments to improve their fight against piracy, which cost technology companies more than $50 billion in 2009.

"The primary message is to tell countries that if you do more in reducing your piracy rate, you're going to get more," Chan told AFP in an interview ahead of the study's launch on Wednesday.

"And if it is accelerated, the economic benefits will even be better."

According to the study, China stands to benefit the most if it further cuts down its piracy rate, which stood at 79 percent in 2009.

Of the estimated 350,000 jobs expected to be generated in the Asia-Pacific region, China will account for 250,000 due to the size of its software industry, the study showed.

India will account for nearly 60,000 jobs, followed by South Korea at over 10,000 and Japan at 9,500.

China will also benefit most in terms of revenues and taxes, the study said.

The report looked at 13 economies that make up 98 percent of the region's packaged software market -- Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.

Piracy rates in the 13 economies in 2009 ranged from a low of 21 percent in Japan to 86 percent in Indonesia, BSA said.

The BSA is an industry group that works for copyright protection and counts among its members some of the world's biggest technology companies as well a local software developers.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Paying the bill for clean industry

Vinh Phu Battery Co in the northern province of Phu Tho applies CPI technology to reduce lead waste, saving the company VND200 million ($10,520) a year. CPI technology helps protect the environment and generates substantial economic benefits. — VNA/VNS Photo Tran Viet

Vinh Phu Battery Co in the northern province of Phu Tho applies CPI technology to reduce lead waste, saving the company VND200 million ($10,520) a year. CPI technology helps protect the environment and generates substantial economic benefits. — VNA/VNS Photo Tran Viet

HA NOI — Lack of awareness and financial support for technology enabling Cleaner Production in Industry (CPI) had handicapped its introduction in Viet Nam, said Nguyen Khac Kinh, deputy president of the Viet Nam Association for Environment Impact Assessment.

Kinh said the CPI was often perceived only as an environmental issue, but in reality it could generate substantial economic benefits.

He said that, for example, the national plan on the CPI (2001 –05), should have been produced by the former Ministry of Trade, but it was managed by the Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment. This slowed down its implementation.

Kinh said it was almost impossible to find funding or technical support for the CPI from any source other than environmental fundings.

A seminar on the CPI in Vinh Phuc province last week was told that although it had been introduced in Viet Nam many years ago, it wasn't widely used by Vietnamese enterprises.

It was told that the CPI required smaller but more environmentally-friendly inputs while minimising production waste.

Dang Tung, head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Department for Science and Technology, said the application of CPI technologies was known to be economical, environmentally clean - and profitable.

A survey by the Viet Nam Cleaner Production Centre found that the application of the CPI in Viet Nam could save 40 to 70 per cent of water, 20 to 50 per cent energy, 50 to 100 per cent of toxic waste, and about 20 to 50 per cent of green gases.

It also found that cleaner production helped improve a company's image, increased productivity and led to sustainability.

In Phu Tho Province, the Vinh Phu Battery Company has applied the CPI technology to reduce lead waste from 5 to 3 per cent, saving the company VND200 million (US$10,520) a year.

Productivity also increased from 480 to 720 product units per hour - and electricity consumption was reduced almost by half, saving the company VND140 million ($7,370).

By using the new technology, the company also requires less workers, 500 instead of 650. This saves it VND250 million ($13,000) a year.

In total, the CPI technology saves the battery company VND590 million ($31,000) a year.

However, although some industries recognise the importance of the CPI, they face a challenge when applying for loans.

According to the Association for Environment Impact Assessment, banks consider the CPI only in terms of environmental protection and do not take into account the economic benefits.

They suggest it should be funded by the State's budget for environmental protection.

Kinh agreed that the CPI technology could be costly and time-consuming, making it an unaffordable practice for most industries.

He suggested policies be introduced to financially back enterprises, such as favourable loans, tax preferential treatment and access to other financial sources.

Kinh said apart from the Ministry of Industry and Trade, other government agencies such as the Ministry of Planning and Investment, Ministry of Finance, and State Bank should also be involved in supporting CPI.

He added that priority should be given to setting up CPI centres in localities throughout the nation.

At present, about 300 enterprises in Viet Nam are using cleaner production technologies.

The Government ratified a strategy on promoting the CPI in September 2009. It hopes that within 10 years, 50 per cent of industry will employthe CPI technology, 90 per cent of medium and big enterprises will have a department exclusively for cleaner production.

The strategy also hopes to produce sufficient, well qualified officers to guide the application of CPI technologies.

And it encourages closer co-operation between research institutes, universities and enterprises in research on the subject. — VNS

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