ISLAMABAD ( Web News )
President Dr Arif Alvi has urged the need to facilitate the expansion and growth of Pakistan’s Information Technology (IT) sector, saying that an informed and dynamic leadership was needed to take steps to facilitate IT businesses, improve Pakistan’s IT eco-system, and provide a conducive environment to budding entrepreneurs in the field of IT and emerging technologies. The President expressed these views while addressing the Emerging Technology Conference organized by “enablers”, an e-commerce network, at Aiwan-e-Sadr, today. CEO of enablers, Mr Saqib Azhar, Vice-Chancellor of Government College University (GCU), Lahore, Dr Asghar Zaidi, and IT entrepreneurs attended the event. Addressing the occasion, the President said that the global IT sector was expanding at an exponential pace, and Pakistan needed to capitalize upon the opportunity being opened up by the IT revolution and improved global connectivity.
He said that the IT sector had the potential to help Pakistan overcome its financial struggles within a short span of time. The President highlighted the need to bridge the gap between academia and industry by regularly updating the higher education curriculum, utilizing hybrid modes of imparting education and developing collaboration between universities and the private sector. He said that Pakistani universities needed to produce graduates as per the demands of the market, as trained and skilled human resources were in great demand throughout the world. He added that in the field of Cyber Security alone, 80 million professionals would be required by the year 2030. The President said that Pakistan needed to enhance the number of IT graduates if it was to compete with other regional countries. He further said that Pakistan only produced 27-30 thousand graduates annually, which could be multiplied by employing online and hybrid modes of learning, besides imparting skills to youth and women through short-term skill-development courses and associate degree programmes. The President said that the global IT industry was rapidly shifting from degree-based qualifications and was employing skilled human resources irrespective of their degrees and academic backgrounds. He added that over 2 million people from different academic backgrounds had already benefitted from and had been imparted digital skills under the Prime Minister’s digiskills program, which could serve as a model for the private sector to be replicated to enhance the skill set of Pakistan’s youth.