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UN Sounds Alarm on Uganda’s Artificial Intelligence Deficit in Stark New Report

TALENT ATWINE MUVUNYI & JJUMBA MUHAMMADBy TALENT ATWINE MUVUNYI & JJUMBA MUHAMMADMay 15, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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KAMPALA — As the digital revolution sweeps across the globe, Uganda stands at a difficult crossroads. While much of the world races ahead with artificial intelligence (AI), Uganda remains anchored by slow human development, deepening inequality, and fragile institutions. These are the sobering insights from the 2025 Human Development Report, released Thursday by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

The report issues an urgent wake-up call: Uganda risks being left behind—not just technologically, but economically and socially—if it does not urgently rethink its development path.

A Low Score in a Fast-Moving World

Uganda is ranked 157th out of 193 countries in the 2023 Human Development Index (HDI), which measures a country’s average achievement in health, education, and income. With a score of 0.582, Uganda remains in the “low human development” category. The gap between Uganda and the global average is not narrowing—it’s growing.

While there have been modest improvements in recent years, the pace of progress is being outstripped by new global realities. Inequality in access to basic services such as education, healthcare, and digital tools is dragging millions down—particularly those in rural areas, women, and the youth.

“Persistent inequalities in health, education, and economic opportunity continue to hold Uganda back,” the report notes. And as the rest of the world gears up for the AI age, those left behind face an even steeper climb.

An Education System Falling Behind

One of the most urgent concerns highlighted in the report is Uganda’s faltering education system. Despite high enrolment numbers, many students leave school without acquiring foundational literacy and numeracy skills. This education gap has devastating consequences in an era where digital literacy is no longer optional.

The report makes a direct connection between poor education outcomes and Uganda’s lack of readiness for AI and other digital technologies. “Without basic skills,” the report says, “people cannot benefit from or contribute to a digital economy.”

As AI increasingly becomes part of the global workplace—shaping healthcare, agriculture, commerce, and education—Ugandans without digital skills risk being locked out of new economic opportunities altogether.

Trapped in a Low-Tech Economy

Uganda’s economy remains stuck in low-value activities—mostly subsistence agriculture and informal services. These sectors are labor-intensive but do not benefit from the kind of technology-led growth that drives high-income economies.

This lack of “economic complexity”—a term used to describe the diversity and sophistication of a country’s industries—means that Uganda struggles to absorb the productivity benefits of new technologies. In simpler terms, the country’s current economic base is not built to take advantage of AI and digital innovation.

The report warns that without a shift toward more diverse and tech-enabled economic sectors, Uganda will remain on the margins of the global economy. It’s not just about creating jobs—it’s about creating the right kind of jobs.

Institutions Not Ready for AI

Uganda’s ability to govern and manage emerging technologies is also under scrutiny. On the Government AI Readiness Index—a global ranking of countries’ institutional capacity to harness AI—Uganda scores well below regional and global averages. The report attributes this to weak digital infrastructure, limited regulation, and lack of coordination among government agencies.

This institutional gap means that Uganda not only lags in deploying AI tools in areas like health, education, and public services, but also risks being overwhelmed by the negative impacts of poorly regulated technologies.

“Institutional preparedness is not a luxury—it is a necessity in managing the ethical and economic risks of AI,” the report warns.

Charting a Smarter Way Forward

Despite these challenges, the Human Development Report doesn’t just diagnose the problem—it offers a roadmap for change. The UNDP recommends that Uganda prioritize what it calls a “complementarity economy”—using AI not to replace human work, but to enhance it.

For instance, in agriculture, AI can help farmers access weather forecasts or market prices via mobile apps. In education, it can support teachers with customized learning tools. In healthcare, it can help extend diagnostic services to rural areas where doctors are scarce.

The report also calls on the government to “promote innovation with intent”—meaning, not just investing in technology, but ensuring that tech is aligned with national development goals. Local tech hubs and start-ups must be supported, and regulation must keep pace with innovation.

Finally, the most fundamental investment Uganda can make is in people. This includes strengthening basic education, expanding digital literacy, and improving access to affordable internet—particularly in rural areas. “Capabilities that count” must become the foundation of Uganda’s development strategy.

A Crucial Turning Point

For Uganda, the choices made now will shape the country’s future for decades. AI is not just a technological shift—it’s a development turning point. The risk, as the report puts it, is that “the benefits of digital transformation could be captured by a few, while the rest fall further behind.”

But the opportunity is also immense. With the right investments in education, infrastructure, and institutions, Uganda can leapfrog into a more inclusive, tech-enabled economy. It’s a future within reach—but only if action starts now.

As fictionalized education policy analyst Sarah Akello puts it: “AI shouldn’t deepen the divide—it should be the bridge. But for that to happen, we must stop thinking of technology as a luxury for the rich, and start treating it as a right for all.”

SIDEBAR: Uganda’s Human Development Snapshot (2025)

  • HDI Rank: 157 out of 193
  • HDI Score: 0.582 (Low Human Development)
  • AI Readiness: Below regional and global average
  • Key Development Gaps: Education, skills, digital infrastructure, institutional coordination
  • UNDP Recommendations: Invest in education and digital literacy, build AI governance, promote innovation with purpose

 

@UNDP
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TALENT ATWINE MUVUNYI & JJUMBA MUHAMMAD

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