Inspiration for digital creatives

NEW! Topic Zones

Digital Arts cover

Buy latest issue NOW!

Creating cutting edge vector art
Master light & shadow
Paint with fire
Graduate showcase
Urban typography
£405 of stock images, fonts & vectors


ipad

The Complete Guide to the iPad

Packed with tips and tricks, the top 50 apps you must download & over 80 pages of step-by step tutorials.
Buy NOW for just £5.99, a saving of 40% off the retail price.

World Bank to invest in creative industries

Friday 20 Oct 2006 - 12:13

The World Bank has revealed it plans to invest heavily in content-creation and media companies -- predicting the creative industries will be the next big boom following the massive growth of technology, according to the organization. Encouraged by the transformative impact that telecommunications, particularly mobile networks, have had on developing countries in Africa and elsewhere, the World Bank's private-sector investment arm plans to expand the scope of its investments to include content providers, according to a senior executive.

"We are looking into how we can invest into content and creative industries," said Mohsen Khalil, the director of global information and communication technologies for the World Bank and its private-sector arm, the International Finance Corp. (IFC).

The move to invest in content companies comes as part of a shift to invest more broadly in technologies and applications that help spur economic and social development. "We're looking at TMT: telecommunications, media and technology. It's not just technology anymore," Khalil said.

In recent years, the mobile telecommunication sector in Africa has proved to be very profitable, with high financial returns for operators and investors. Moreover, the networks have been a boon for the citizens of many African countries. "It has a tremendous effect on economic development and growth," he said.

That was not always the case. "We ventured into cellular very early, ahead of others, including private enterprise. Our first investment in cellular was in 1989 in a project in Zaire," Khalil said, referring to the country now called Democratic Republic of Congo.

The World Bank and IFC are hoping to make an equally prescient move by pushing into media and content investments early. "We're looking at what is the next cycle, what will make the most impact," he said.

Sumner Lemon

Keep up-to-date with the latest creative news -- click here follow @digital_arts on Twitter.


Submit to: DiggDigg deliciousDel.icio.us redditReddit

What is this?


Promotions

alt content

Corbis Introduces £5 Web and Mobile Resolution Photos as New Research Finds Interesting Pictures Make Online Ads More Effective.

Click here for more information

Search news

Latest News

Latest Tutorials

Latest Reviews

Latest Features

EDIGIT SIGN-UP

The twice-weekly newsletter with all the latest creative news, reviews, and features



More info...


rss iconSign up to Digital Arts news feed