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CARIB | Nov 30, 2022

Latin America and the Caribbean will need additional 2.5 million ICT professionals in next 5 years, says expert

/ Our Today

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FILE PHOTO: The Huawei logo is seen at the IFA consumer technology fair, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Berlin, Germany September 3, 2020. REUTERS/Michele Tantussi

Latin America and the Caribbean will need an additional 2.5 million ICT-related professionals by 2026, an industry executive said recently, during the LAC ICT Talent Summit jointly organised by Huawei and UNESCO.

There are an estimated 6.3 million professionals with digital skills to cover essential and emerging roles.

The IDC report estimates that an additional 2.5 million ICT-related professionals will be in demand by 2026, and that the demand for emerging new roles oriented to digital businesses will be growing faster than those for traditional IT jobs.

CHALLENGES MEETING DEMAND FOR QUALIFIED PERSONNEL

“We are seeing a fast digitalising economy, which means that the digital sector is not only representing but contributing and transforming a larger and larger proportion of the overall economic output, and the digital talent is the bedrock of the digital economy,” said Michael Xue, vice president at Huawei Latin America and the Caribbean.

During the two days of discussions, academics, policymakers, business leaders, university students and representatives of international organisations covered topics such as the present and future of education and technology, digital transformation, the labour market for ICT professionals and the challenges faced by countries in the region to meet the demand for qualified personnel and digital skills.

“The COVID-19 pandemic made clear the urgent need to close the digital gap and to make digital content, technology and connectivity available to all,” said Claudia Uribe, director of OREALC, UNESCO.

Michael Xue, vice president at Huawei Latin America and the Caribbean.

By 2025, the economic impact of global IT skills gap may reach US$1 trillion, compared with US$775 billion forecast by the end of 2022. For Latin America, this impact could represent almost US$50 billion by 2025, which would signify at least one per cent of the regional GDP for the same year, said the IDC report.

Guests at the summit forum said these figures would also mean challenges for regional countries to ride on the growth and realise the growth opportunities and that the only way forward is for all stakeholders to work together to grow the digital talent pool and bridge the digital talent gaps, both in terms of the pool and the skills.

Participants at the conference, which gathered some 100 experts and 150 students, also discussed the interactions of the various parties to the talent eco-system.

GOVERNMENT HAS KEY ROLE ENCOURAGING BEST PRACTICES

Universities and institutes are training the workforce of the future and their infrastructure or capabilities will be reinforced in alliance with the private sector.

The enterprises are hiring people, so they know which specialties are required and at the same time the companies are shaping the younger generation. Meanwhile, the governments have a key role encouraging best practices and making policies.

Huawei is the employer and, at the same time, cultivator of one of the world’s largest groups of top ICT talents. The company has 197,000 employees around the globe, with more than half in research and development.

“We are committed to growing the digital talent pool in the region and we believe in being in Latin America and the Caribbean for Latin America and the Caribbean.”

Zhou Danjin, president of Huawei Latin America

The company has launched various talent initiatives globally. In Latin America and the Caribbean, Huawei has helped train 50,000 talents over the past years. It has launched its flagship Seeds for the Future in the region since 2014, offering some 1,800 scholarships for students to receive intensive training and visit the company’s headquarters in Shenzhen in southern China. It also has partnered near 400 universities offering capacity building through the Huawei ICT Academy programme. Many students from the region also participated in the Huawei Global ICT Competition.

“We are committed to growing the digital talent pool in the region and we believe in being in Latin America and the Caribbean for Latin America and the Caribbean,” Zhou Danjin, president of Huawei Latin America.

“I believe we will have a role to play in growing the regional digital talent pool. As for us, we can -through our various programmes and initiatives- give the younger generation the much-needed exposure to trends and technologies such as Cloud, AI, IoT and Data Science.”

The LAC ICT Talent Summit, jointly organised by Huawei, OREALC and EFE, is aimed to be a multilateral platform to drive joint efforts in Latin America and the Caribbean to grow the regional digital talent pool in response to the demand created by ever faster digital transformation.

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