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Pre-Budget ICT Discourse 2083

About This Initiative

The Pre-Budget ICT Discourse 2083 is a high-level, time-sensitive policy dialogue designed to influence Nepal’s upcoming national budget for FY 2083/084, scheduled to be announced on Jestha, 2083. With a new government recently formed, demonstrating a positive and increasingly aggressive stance toward digital transformation and public service delivery, this moment presents a critical policy window to align ICT priorities with fiscal allocation.

Despite growing recognition of ICT as a driver of economic growth, innovation, and governance efficiency, Nepal’s budget trends indicate limited, fragmented, and often under-prioritized investment in digital sectors. Building on momentum from recent Digital Leadership Dialogue sessions – organized prior to manifesto development to ensure ICT inclusion in political agendas – this discourse serves as a strategic follow-up, focusing on translating commitments into budgetary action.

Graph with Nepal map and currency

The program will convene key stakeholders to develop actionable, consensus-driven recommendations, culminating in a Budget Recommendation Paper to be submitted to the Government of Nepal. The program will convene 100 high-level stakeholders to develop actionable, consensus-driven recommendations, culminating in a Budget Recommendation Paper submitted to the Government of Nepal.

Program Highlights:

Key Data Points

ICT Budget Share

ICT sector receives less than 1% of total national budget (~NPR 7–8 billion)

Digital Economy Potential

NPR 3 trillion IT exports & 1.5 million jobs under the IT Decade (2081–2091)

Internet & Digital Access

Over 90% mobile internet penetration, but quality and rural access gaps remain

Youth & Workforce Trend

Nepal has a young, tech-savvy population with rising involvement in freelancing, startups, and IT services

Digital Payment & e-Governance Growth

Rapid increase in online services, digital payments, and citizen adoption

Implementation Gap

High policy commitment but low capital expenditure utilization and slow execution

Background & National Budget Context

Nepal’s national budget has traditionally prioritized infrastructure, social services, and agriculture while ICT has been treated as a cross-cutting enabler rather than a core economic sector. The structural gaps are consistent and well-documented.

Emerging Budget Trends in Nepal

  • Gradual increase in digital-related allocations, but no dedicated, strategic ICT investment framework.
  • ICT budgets dispersed across multiple ministries, leading to duplication and inefficiency.
  • Limited allocation toward innovation, startups, and IT-enabled exports.
  • Underinvestment in cybersecurity, data infrastructure, and emerging technologies like AI.
  • Increasing focus on digital governance and e-services, but with implementation gaps

The Gap

Despite strong policy recognition, ICT budget allocation in Nepal remains fragmented and insufficient.

The Disconnect

Stakeholder priorities have not consistently influenced fiscal decisions; commitments rarely translate into coordinated investment.

The Need

A structured, pre-budget consultation platform that connects policy dialogue directly to the budget formulation process.

Current Policy Opportunity

The newly formed government has expressed strong commitment to digital governance and service delivery reform, technology-driven economic growth, and openness toward innovation, startups, and digital economy expansion.
With the national budget announcement approaching on Jestha 25, 2083, this is a crucial and timely opportunity to:

  • Influence fiscal priorities.
  • Align policy commitments with resource allocation.
  • Ensure ICT is positioned as a strategic investment sector.

This discourse is the natural and strategic continuation of the Digital Leadership Dialogue series which successfully elevated ICT as a national agenda across political parties ahead of manifesto development.

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