When Gopal Maharjan, a young engineering graduate in Nepal, started looking for a job in Kathmandu he did not get a great response. Then he heard about online jobs with CloudFactory, a ¡°microwork¡± platform. He and some friends formed a group and applied online. They were accepted and given part-time jobs doing work such as digitizing old, hand-written data, tracking supermarket receipts, or even medical transcription. The group meets regularly with CloudFactory staff to share questions about their work and learn.
¡°Economically, this job is a lot of help,¡± says Gopal. ¡°Now I don¡¯t have to feel odd in front of my friends who are working, as I have a source of income as well. My family is also very supportive of the job, as they feel that I am being productive and not wasting my time.¡±
Across the globe, information and communication technologies (ICTs) are transforming the world of work, creating new job opportunities and making labor markets more innovative, inclusive, and global.
According to a new World Bank policy note, ¡°,¡± three trends are driving the increase in ICT-related jobs worldwide:
- Greater connectivity ¨C more than 120 countries now have over 80 percent market penetration of mobile telephones.
- Digitization of more aspects of work ¨C today, telecommuting and outsourcing have become standard business practices globally.
- More globalized skills ¨C India and the Philippines have become major outsourcing hubs thanks to their English language skills, and other countries are targeting the sector for future growth.
¡°ICTs are influencing employment both as an industry that creates jobs and as a tool that empowers workers to access new forms of work, in new and more flexible ways,¡± says Chris Vein, World Bank Chief Innovation Officer for Global ICT Development. ¡°The emerging ICT-enabled employment opportunities matter because countries around the world are looking to create more good jobs, which have positive economic and social implications for workers and for society.¡±