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Clinton Says Mobile Tech, Cooperation Key to Tackling Global Problems

Kenneth Corbin | May 11, 2012
In closing address at CTIA show, former president Bill Clinton touts potential for wireless devices and applications to address major socioeconomic problems, urges multi-stakeholder approach.

Wireless technology figures to be a crucial factor in any serious address of the laundry list of capital-letter challenges confronting the developing world, from health care to personal finance, energy to education, former President Bill Clinton said in a closing keynote address here at the CTIA Wireless 2012 show.

Clinton also had a larger point to make, warning that divisive politics and a narrow-minded focus on special interests run at cross purposes from solving the big problems.

"What works in real life is creative networks of cooperation," Clinton told his audience of wireless industry members from around the world. "If you think about it, the business you're in created more new networks of knowledge and cooperation than any single development in human history all around the world."

Since leaving politics in 2000, Clinton has thrown himself into work addressing numerous social, economic and health issues in some of the poorest areas of the world, forming a foundation and the Clinton Global Initiative to give those efforts and organizational structure.

In the aftermath of the devastating Indian ocean tsunami of 2004, he and former President George H.W. Bush helped lead relief efforts. He recounted meeting the widows of the fisherman who lost their lives in the disaster, helping to coordinate job training for those interested in pursuing other occupations. But for those who were committed to continuing to fish, relief workers helped equip them with mobile devices that they could use to check the going rate of fish in markets 10, 20, 30 miles away. The result, Clinton said, was a 30 percent to 50 percent increase in their income.

Or in Haiti, where Clinton and former President George W. Bush were heavily involved in relief efforts following the 2010 earthquake, one initiative spearheaded by a company based out of Ireland helped to set up a mobile-banking system, enabling citizens of a country with no functional banking industry to make deposits, withdrawals and mobile-to-mobile payments.

It's not just developing countries where Clinton sees an application for wireless technology.

"Wireless is going to play a huge role in trying to bring American health-care costs in line with that of our competitors while maintaining access to quality care in remote places that don't have traditional health care," he said.

But all those efforts that Clinton described, noble as they may be, would have come up short without a spirit of cooperation that required stakeholders to put aside narrow political gamesmanship or special-interest advocacy in favor of tackling the urgent problem at hand.

"In every case you have cooperation between at least a willing government, the private sector and often a nongovernmental organization," he said. "They've got a job to do so no one has any time to argue about politics."

 

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