The federal government through the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) has engaged multinationals and private organisations to develop and co-create National Digital Skills Strategy (NDSS).
This development was in the continued effort at maximising socio-economic opportunities and the target of achieving 95 per cent digital literacy penetration by the year 2030 in the country.
Recently the minister of communications and digital economy Prof. Isa Ali Ibrahim (Pantami) formally received two Nigerian start-up firms that made Nigeria proud by emerging global winners from the LEAP 2023 Rocket Fuel Pitch Startup competition that just ended in Riyadh Saudi Arabia.
The Nigerian global winners in different categories of the LEAP 2023 Rocket Fuel Pitch Startup Competition, were WICRYPT by Aronu Ugochukwu and RICE AFRIKA by Maigari Ahmadu. Each won a $150,000 cash prize. This feat in Saudi Arabia was considered the outcome of the investment in the digital economy sector of Nigeria.
The NDSS is a policy document developed by NITDA under the directive of minister of communications and digital economy Prof. Isa Ali Ibrahim (Pantami), to bridge the digital skills gap in the country and develop a clear road map for the diversification of the nation’s economy and sustainability of its digital economy.
The engagement, which was held virtually, had representatives from International Business Machines Corporation (IBM), United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Apple, Huawei, Meta, Oracle, Google, Cisco Software Inc and many others.While giving an insight into the genesis of the development of the NDSS during his remarks, the NITDA director general, Kashifu Inuwa, disclosed that the agency, in collaboration with the Co-Creation Hub, undertook research to understand existing talent and skills which later on birthed the first draft of the NDSS.
Inuwa stated that the NDSS will help re-position the country in alignment with global standards and to take full advantage of the digital economy benefits, while identifying digital literacy and skills as a critical strategic pillar in the agency’s Strategic Roadmap and Action Plan (SRAP) 2021-2024 towards the implementation of the present administration’s National Digital Economy Policy and Strategy (NDEPS).
“In line with the digital literacy and skills pillar of NDEPS for a Digital Nigeria, NITDA has set out a target of 1 million developers and skills by December 2023 and thus, rolled out several capacity building programmes that are targeted at people from different sectors of the economy,” he noted.
The NITDA boss added that many of the capacity-building programmes were conducted in collaboration with professional ICT bodies, international corporations, and non-governmental organisations to provide stronger support for reskilling and upskilling for at-risk or displaced workers.
“As the apex information technology development and regulatory agency in the country, the collaboration of the agency with key multinational and private stakeholders in developing the NDSS will produce a robust strategy.
“The creation of the first draft by volunteer expert groups, talent gap assessment, and co-creation with government stakeholders are some of the achievements made so far,” he said.
Inuwa also urged everyone, especially stakeholders and other well-meaning Nigerians in the digital economy family to make inputs that would meet the unified mission and vision of the NDSS.
While expressing his belief in the promising outcome of the collaboration, Inuwa stated that “this is a crucial milestone in our efforts to harmoniously engage with multinationals and private sectors as one of the key stakeholders for developing and co-creating the NDSS, and to come up with a comprehensive strategy for setting up standards and developing digital literacy and skills in the country, as well as developing IT professional skills of different proficiency levels,” he added.
Acting director of the digital literacy and capacity building department of NITDA, Dr. Amina Sambo-Magaji, thanked all participants for the support and cooperation given thus far.
She stated that the Rule Making Process (RMP) of NITDA has made provision for engagement in the development of the NDSS.
While noting that the selection of the multinationals and tech giants for the collaboration had been carefully done regarding their operations as individual organisations, she was confident that the co-creation of the NDSS will align with the document’s priority and consequently produce a robust one.