Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Monday, February 08 2021 - 11:01
AsiaNet
Health and social care to gain the most from 5G productivity and efficiency gains, which will add US$1.3trillion to global GDP by 2030
LONDON, Feb. 8, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

- New analysis of 5G - the next generation of mobile connectivity - estimates 
  the impact of new and existing applications.

- Over half the global economic impact (US$530bn) will be driven by the 
  transformation of health and social care within the next ten years; a 
  quarter by smart utilities driving savings in energy, water and waste 
  management. 

- Large manufacturing-based economies are likely to gain the most, including 
  the United States (USA), China and Japan, but gains are projected globally 
  as 5G integrates as a critical part of societal infrastructure.

- Transparency is critical to building trust with consumers and regulators 
  5G's application.

Productivity and efficiency gains enabled by 5G's application will drive 
business, skills and service change worth US$1.3 trillion to global GDP by 
2030. 

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In Powering Your Tomorrow (http://pwc.com/economic-impact-5g ), PwC quantifies 
for the first time, the economic impact of new and existing uses of 5G in 
utilities, health and social care, consumer, media, and financial services 
across eight economies with advanced rollout: Australia, China, Germany, India, 
Japan, South Korea, USA and the United Kingdom (UK). 

More than a faster version of mobile connectivity on 4G, 5G's speed, 
reliability, reduced energy usage and massive connectivity will be 
transformative for businesses and wider society, enabling ubiquitous access to 
super fast broadband. Used in combination with investments in artificial 
intelligence (AI) and the internet of things (IoT), 5G can be used as a 
platform to enable business and society to realise the full benefits of 
emerging technology advances. 

Economic gains are projected across all economies assessed in the study, as 5G 
offers the potential to rethink business models, skills, products and services, 
with the gains accelerating beginning in 2025 as 5G-enabled applications become 
more widespread

Based on the study, the USA (US$484bn), China (US$220bn) and Japan (US$76bn) 
will experience the largest uplift as a result of 5G technology applications, 
due to the size of their economies and strong modern industrial production 
sectors. 

At a regional level Europe, Middle East & Africa (EMEA) is expected to benefit 
the most from manufacturing applications of 5G, due to the size of the 
manufacturing sectors. It demonstrates the potential for regional competitive 
advantage through approaches to the adoption and regulation of the technology. 

Wilson Chow, Global Technology, Media and Telecommunications Industry Leader, 
PwC China, comments:
"These numbers quantify impact, but perhaps more important, our study reflects 
the value of 5G - new levels of connectivity and collaboration mean companies 
will be able to see, do and achieve more. It will open up new opportunities for 
growth and change as organisations rethink and reconfigure the way they operate 
in the post-pandemic world.

"With the pandemic accelerating digitalisation across all sectors, 5G will act 
as a further catalyst. It will emerge in this decade as a fundamental piece of 
our societal infrastructure and as a platform for driving the competitiveness 
of national economies, new business models, skills and industries."

Achieving better, faster outcomes in health and social care
Over half the global economic impact (US$530bn) will be driven by the 
transformation of health and social care experience for patients, providers and 
medical staff within the next ten years. 

While the acceleration of telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic provided a 
glimpse of the future of healthcare, remote care is just one area in which 5G 
can enable both better health outcomes and cost savings. 

5G's applications include remote monitoring and consultations, real time 
in-hospital data sharing, improved doctor-patient communications and automation 
in hospitals to reduce health care costs. 

Regional & Sector impacts 

At a sector level, impacts vary for individual economies. The USA and Australia 
are projected to gain the most from financial services applications: India from 
smart utilities; China and Germany in manufacturing.  Other industries analysed 
in the study show the significant potential of new and existing applications 
over the next decade, driving changes in skills, jobs, consumer products and 
regulation:

    -- SMART utilities management applications will support environmental 
       targets to reduce carbon and waste through enabling combined smart 
       meters and grids to deliver energy savings, and improving waste and 
       water management through tracking of waste and water leakage 
       (US$330bn). 

    -- Consumer and media applications include: over the top (OTT) gaming, 
       real time advertising and customer services (US$254bn) 

    -- Manufacturing and heavy industry applications include: monitoring 
       and reducing defects, increased autonomous vehicle use (US$134bn) 

    -- Financial services applications including reducing fraud and 
       improving customer experiences (US$86bn)

Wilson Chow comments: 
"5G is more than mobile connectivity. It puts a new lens on advancing 
productivity and rethinking entire business models for the future. Given the 
scale of potential and its impacts, every organisation will need a plan for 
5G's implementation within five years across technology and business strategies 
to maximise opportunities and prepare for how they integrate their technology 
and business strategies, and engage with customers, supply chain and 
regulators."

Policy & Trust 
The study highlights that the reach of 5G's technology potential will require 
businesses and government to consider new approaches to regulatory and consumer 
engagement - focusing on how the technology is used. 

Wilson Chow comments: 
"With any technology, policy engagement, transparency and public trust are 
critical factors. Whether it's considering the use of self driving vehicles or 
telemedicine, how data is managed, infrastructure deployed, or how different 
sectors collaborate, business and government need to shit from focusing on 
regulating a technology, to promoting transparency in 5G's application, 
building and sustaining public trust in its use and potential."

Download the report here: (http://pwc.com/economic-impact-5g )

About the report

PwC drew on expert insight and using economic modeling, to examine the impact 
of 5G's use across five industries. The projections in this study represent the 
net economic impact of 5G technology, taking into account displacement effects 
such as some economic activities becoming obsolete and focusing on economic 
value added across value chains and throughout the economy, rather than only 
the revenues of 5G telecoms businesses. Further details on the methodology can 
be found here: (http://pwc.com/economic-impact-5g ). 

About PwC

At PwC, our purpose is to build trust in society and solve important problems. 
We're a network of firms in 157 countries with over 276,000 people who are 
committed to delivering quality in assurance, advisory and tax services. Find 
out more and tell us what matters to you by visiting us at: www.pwc.com.

PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms, each of 
which is a separate legal entity. Please see: www.pwc.com/structure for further 
details.

(c) 2021 PwC. All rights reserved.

SOURCE: PwC Global Corporate Affairs
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