Abstract: |
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) experienced a process of marginalization in the
global economy in the 1980s and 1990s. Some now assert this is being reversed
by an information technology revolution on the sub-continent. SSA now has the
fastest growing mobile phone penetration rates in the world and most people
there now live under the "footprint" of mobile phones. However, while many
claims are made for the poverty reduction potential of new ICTs, very little
research has been done on how access affects firm strategies, and innovation
and consequently may contribute to broader economic transformation; vital to
sustainable poverty reduction. This paper contextualises the adoption of new
ICTs and then examines evidence of the uses and impacts of new ICTs in the
wood products industry in Durban, South Africa and its surrounding region. It
finds that while ICT usage is being routinised in the sector, their impacts
are incremental than transformative. Consequently while these technologies are
being absorbed into the socio-technical regime, their overall economic impact
is limited. |