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The Future of the Information Revolution in Latin America

Proceedings of an International Conference

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By: Gregory F. Treverton, Lee Mizell

Reports the results of a conference held to chart the future course of changes brought about by the revolution in information technology (IT) in Latin America. Although there are vast differences among Latin American nations, they face many similar problems. Their governments, though relatively important users of IT, have taken a "fiscal" rather than a "consumer" viewpoint, so that IT products remain expensive. E-commerce has been hampered by people's lack of credit cards and the lack of infrastructure for delivering purchases, and there are few Internet start-up companies because of a lack of financing. However, the successful experience of some nations, such as Costa Rica and several of the island states, has shown that it is not necessary to create IT products to use them effectively. NAFTA gives Mexico a special set of connections to the United States, including in IT. Mexico weathered the financial crises of the 1990s better than other regions because it was so closely tied to a booming U.S. economy. Although desires for national or regional autonomy will persist in Latin America, autonomy should not mean disconnecting but rather trying to structure connections to the global economy in a way that will provide maximum advantage to the nation and its citizens.

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Pages: 86

ISBN/EAN: 0-8330-3017-5

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Contents

Preface

Figures

Tables

Summary and Reflections

Acknowledgments

Part One: Description of Proceedings

Chapter One:
Introduction

Chapter Two:
Surveying the Latin American Infrastructure

Chapter Three:
The Economic and Business Dimension

Chapter Four:
Information Revolutionaries

Chapter Five:
Small Group Discussion: Economic and Business Dimension

Chapter Six:
The Political Dimension

Chapter Seven:
The Societal Dimension

Chapter Eight:
Small Group Discussion: Political and Societal Dimensions

Chapter Nine:
Looking Forward

Part Two: Appendixes

NOTE: The appendixes are only available in the hard copy version.

Appendix A:
Conference Agenda

Appendix B:
Conference Attendees

Bibliography

The research described in this report was performed under the auspices of RAND's National Security Research Division.

This product is part of the RAND Corporation conference proceedings series. RAND conference proceedings present a collection of papers delivered at a conference or a summary of the conference. The material herein has been vetted by the conference attendees and both the introduction and the post-conference material have been reviewed and approved for publication by the sponsoring research unit at RAND.

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