However, following the shift from 11 to 14 indicators, countries were facing challenges in collecting and submitting quality data. This was despite the fact that following the adoption of the new list of indicators, ITU organized and ran capacity building workshops in all the regions. For the calculation of the 2018 IDI, only 42 per cent of all data points required to calculate the would be based on data submitted by countries, requiring ITU to estimate 58 per cent of data points. Furthermore, only 112 countries were able to submit data for more than half of the IDI indicators. The data collection also revealed that some of the data submitted by countries were not in line with ITU’s agreed methodology resulting in the data not being sufficiently harmonized. Finally, while the extraordinary meeting in 2017 agreed on a revised list of indicators to be included in the IDI, it did not engage in the other methodological steps required for the development and calculation of a composite index (imputation of missing data, statistical analysis, sensitivity analysis, etc.). When the ITU Secretariat undertook this rather technical work, several flaws appeared with respect to some of the new indicators included in the IDI, which prevented the index from reflecting the true ICT development in countries.
For these reasons, the Secretary General of the ITU decided to postpone the publication of the IDI until 2019, which was communicated in Circular
SG/BDT/010 of 5 December 2018, and
presented by the ITU Secretariat during the 16th World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators Symposium (WTIS), which took place from 10 to 12 December 2018.
In 2019, after completing the data collection for the IDI and verifying the data received from countries, it was found that, despite two rounds of capacity building workshops in all regions, the data situation had not improved sufficiently to warrant the calculation of the IDI for 2019 based on the revised set of indicators. The flaws related to the selection of indicators also persisted. For these reasons, the ITU Secretariat was not in a position to publish the IDI using the revised set of indicators. This was communicated in
Circular/BDT/DKH/IDA/026 of 3 October 2019, which also detailed the reasons why the revised IDI could not be calculated.
As a temporary measure for 2019, the ITU proposed to resume the publication of the IDI based on the original methodology and set of 11 indicators. During the meetings of the EGTI and EGH, held from 17 to 20 September 2019, several countries expressed concerns about publishing the IDI 2019 using the original methodology, while other countries supported this proposal. The BDT Director therefore decided to consult with all Member States on this matter. The
consultation was also announced in Circular/BDT/DKH/IDA/026 of 3 October 2019.
Out of the 193 ITU Members, a response was received from 76 administrations: 49 were in favour of using the methodology used until 2017, 17 were against, and 10 had no preference. This meant there was no clear consensus, and the decision was taken that the IDI would not be published again in 2019. This was announced in
Circular/BDT/DKH/IDA/027 of 16 October 2019. The Circular Letter also announced that going forward, BDT, in collaboration with the membership and internationally recognized experts, would continue to work on a more transparent, robust, and reliable methodology with a view to publishing an index in 2020, taking into consideration Plenipotentiary Conference (PP)
Resolution 131 (rev. Dubai 2018) and World Telecommunication Development Conference (WTDC)
Resolution 8 (Rev. Buenos Aires 2017).