•      Thu Nov 21 2024
Logo

Nepal ranks 150th in AI Readiness Index



AI Robot

Kathmandu, March 2: Nepal has been ranked 150th out of 193 countries in the Government AI Readiness Index, 2023.

The report published by the Oxford Insights shows the US in first position with 84.80 total score, while Singapore the second in the index with 81.97 total score. Nepal has got the total score- 30.77.

In the Index, the total score is calculated from three bases- government pillar, technology sector pillar, and data and infrastructure pillar. With total score, 30.77, Nepal has achieved 31.04 in government pillar, 24.21 in technology sector pillar, and 37.06 in data and infrastructure pillar.

In the previous year, 2022, Nepal had secured 139th position out of 181 countries in the Government AI Readiness Index.

The total score was 30.75 where Nepal got 30.88 mark under government pillar, 23.50 mark under technology sector pillar, and 37.88 mark under the data and infrastructure pillar.

It was Afghanistan at the bottom (181st rank) with 13.46 total score in 2022, while the Democratic Republic of Korea at the bottom (193rd) with total score 9.20 in 2023.

India is ranked 40th while China 16th in 2023, while they were ranked 32nd and 17th respectively in 2022. The three pillars were analysed by setting different dimensions.

Under the government pillar, there were four dimensions- vision, governance and ethic, digital capacity, and adaptability.

Similarly, the technology sector pillar comprised three dimensions- maturity, innovation capacity, and human capital.

The third pillar, data and infrastructure, has also included three dimensions, infrastructure, data availability and data representativeness.

A total of 39 indicators were set for 10 dimensions under three pillars.

The report collected data from various sources, including OECD AI Policy Observatory, UN IDIR AI policy portal, Global Cybersecurity Index, Worldwide Governance indicators, UN e-Government Survey, Network Readiness Index, International Telecommunications Union, and the World Bank.

The Index has mentioned the developments relating to AI in all sorts of countries ranging from LDCs to emerging economies to the developed ones.

Persisting global digital divide In the finding, the report stated, “Half of the AI strategies that were published or announced come from low and lower middle income countries.

The scores in the Data and Infrastructure pillar show a substantial difference between high and low income economies, illustrating an existing global digital divide.”

At a time when most of the countries are swayed by the modern buzz, AI, and striving to both promote and regulate AI irrespective of their capacities, the Index is expected to cater relevant knowledge to the government, private sectors and researchers.

The Oxford Insights is a UK-based organization working around intersection of technology and government and generating global scale study reports. #Nepal