Digital Opportunity Index

The Digital Opportunity Index (DOI) is an index published by the United Nations International Telecommunication Union based on internationally-agreed ICT indicators. This makes it a valuable tool for benchmarking the most important indicators for measuring the Information Society. The DOI is a standard tool that governments, operators, development agencies, researchers and others can use to measure the digital divide and compare ICT performance within and across countries.

The Digital Opportunity Index (DOI) is based on 11 ICT indicators, grouped in 3 clusters: opportunity, infrastructure and utilization. The DOI has been compiled for 181 economies for a period of three years from 2004-2006. An even longer time series for 62 leading economies for the period 2000-2006 is also available.[1] It has since been superseded by the ICT Development Index which combines some of the indicators used in the DOI with other measures of the digital divide.[2]

Top 25 economies, 2007

The following is a list of top 25 countries as ranked by the Digital Opportunity Index. The maximum score is .80, a perfect value in theory.

Rank Country Score
1  South Korea 0.80 (Max.)
2  Japan 0.77
3  Denmark 0.76
4  Iceland 0.74
5  Singapore 0.72
6  Netherlands 0.71
7  Taiwan 0.71
8  Hong Kong 0.70
9  Sweden 0.70
10  United Kingdom 0.69
11  Finland 0.69
12  Norway 0.69
13  Luxembourg 0.69
14  Israel 0.69
15  Macau 0.69
16  Switzerland 0.69
17  Canada 0.67
18  Austria 0.67
19  Germany 0.66
20  Spain 0.65
21  Australia 0.65
22  Belgium 0.65
23  Estonia 0.65
24  New Zealand 0.65

References