
Digital infrastructure now sits at the base of daily life. From the moment a person checks a phone to the time a business processes payments, a network of systems operates in the background to form a structure that supports both online tasks and large-scale economic activity.
In the second episode of the 大象传媒 B-Side podcast series titled 鈥淲here the Digital World Converges: Conversations on Cloud,鈥 Converge Vice-President and Head of Digital Infrastructure Noriel Ong and Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) Assistant Secretary Atty. Christian G. Guingcangco discussed how digital systems affect economic activity.
鈥淚f you look at every business, if you look at the way we live on a daily basis, it all depends on the digital infrastructure,鈥 Mr. Ong said.聽鈥淚 believe the country’s competitiveness will definitely rely on how well the digital infrastructure is established.鈥
Mr. Ong outlined four main components that make up this system: terrestrial fiber networks, international gateways, data centers,聽and digital platforms.
鈥All these have to work together to function. What if one of them fails? Everything falls apart,鈥 Mr. Ong explained. 鈥淚t is very important that the systems are completely integrated to perform their functions.鈥
From a policy standpoint, Mr. Guingcangco compared today鈥檚 investments in digital systems to earlier efforts that focused on roads and bridges. He mentioned that the priority has moved to enabling the movement of data and services.
鈥淚n the old days, we were building roads and bridges to move around goods and services,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut right now, we鈥檙e building digital infrastructure, basically the information highways to move around ideas and capital.鈥
Such change now allows businesses to operate beyond their immediate location. The access improves business capacity and opens opportunities that were not available in earlier systems.
Addressing bottlenecks
Despite progress in connectivity,聽barriers still hold back development.
One of the most common problems involves right-of-way access. Mr. Ong said this issue often delays the installation of cables and poles, especially in densely populated or privately owned areas. Without clear and faster approvals, projects face long timelines before construction even begins.
鈥淭he government plays a very important role in this for the right-of-way issue, especially if we’re talking about a critical infrastructure. In other countries, some governments have a process designed for the critical infrastructure such as data centers and the fiber networks. Just like our major highways, our skyways, these are national critical infrastructure, and they should be given priority,鈥 he noted.
Mr. Ong聽added that permit processing also takes time and requires changes.聽A more direct system, he said, could help speed up expansion.
鈥淭he government would play a very important role to look at the framework and see what kind of solutions we can set to overcome these challenges,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we have a one-stop shop process for national critical infrastructure development, we can set the framework and workflow.鈥
The DICT said it has started to address these gaps through policy efforts. These include the聽Konektadong聽Pinoy聽Act and the National Digital Connectivity Plan聽(NDCP), which aim to improve coordination and simplify processes.
鈥淭hese two policies, we encourage them from being the gatekeeper to become the gateway,鈥 Mr. Guingcangco said. 鈥淏asically, we’re granting our stakeholders ease of accessing聽in聽getting permits.鈥
He also pointed to interoperability as a key part of digital systems. Under the E-Government Act, agencies must connect their layers of systems, which is physical and virtual, so services can move across platforms without delays.
鈥淵ou may have the best and fastest smartphone鈥 but if you don鈥檛 have the infrastructure, you won鈥檛 be able to access it,鈥 Mr.聽Guingcangco聽noted.
To expand coverage, the government is also looking at shared investment models. Mr. Guingcangco described a setup where 60% comes from the private sector and 40% from the government. In this arrangement, the government handles access and support, while companies build and maintain systems.
鈥It was stated in the NDCP for us to essentially deploy an infrastructure that will be maintained and operated long-term. We need to involve the private sector to help us out and tap their expertise,鈥 he explained. 鈥淲e understand that the private sector might not find it feasible to reach these far-flung areas right now via fiber or other modality. That’s where the government steps in, because we ensure that there’s no Filipino left behind.鈥
Data processing and storing
Meanwhile, Mr. Ong said the challenge goes beyond improving internet speed or coverage. He pointed to the need for a broader approach that includes fiber networks, subsea cables, data centers and digital platforms working as one system.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e spending $20 billion a year聽for聽offshore data processing and storing,鈥 Mr. Ong said. 鈥淚f you repatriate all your data here in the Philippines, that amount of money that you pay offshore is spent inside the Philippine economy.鈥
Mr.聽Guingcangco聽shared聽that聽local data hosting could support several industries, from finance to online services. He raised the possibility of the Philippines serving as a hub for the region if it builds the right systems.
鈥淪o, what if we become聽the聽host聽for聽the region?聽It would聽really not聽just聽improve,聽it would meet the聽reason聽why聽are we investing in the first place.鈥
Listen to the full episode on 大象传媒 B-Side on or watch on 大象传媒鈥檚 official .
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