22 research outputs found

    Critical Evaluation of AI System Implementation as a Source of Competitive Advantage

    Get PDF
    Over the years, there has been a gradual change in relation to how businesses conduct their daily business activities. Many of have deviated from the initial old methods to using AI as a means of having competitive advantage. This paper seeks to evaluate the effectiveness of integrating AI as a business strategy, cost effective, more efficient once the program has been set and also helps in effective business management. It also takes over repetitive and dangerous tasks. However, lacks out of the box thinking meaning that it only at times operates within the confines of the specific objectives. This may in turn be a negative aspect when where is need for critical business decisions to be made in business. It also lacks emotion when there is need to do so in addressing some of the customer’s complaints and this may bring about customer dissatisfaction.Keywords: Artificial Intelligence, Marketing, Internet of Things, Japan DOI: 10.7176/JMCR/74-02 Publication date: December 31st 202

    A transitional justice model for Zimbabwe

    Get PDF
    LL.M. (International Commercial Law)Abstract: Zimbabwe is in a quagmire. The time for regional and international complacency has passed and it is now in the hands of ordinary masses with a coalition of the wiling regional and international allies to usher in true social, economic and political recovery in Zimbabwe. The nation is replete with past and current human rights violations. The consequence of this state of affairs is a society traumatized by fear, withdrawal and collective depression based on past memories of violence, intimidation and harassment. The skeletons must be unearthed in the interest of accountability and nation building. Even though Zimbabwe has not gone through any real political transition, it is still possible to devise a way of achieving restorative justice. There are many countries to learn from while devising a transitional justice model for Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe must devise a form of transitional justice which will not only look backward- punishing, remembering, discovering the truth, telling the stories- but will also look forward, restoring the rule of law and creating new institutions and new attitudes which will protect from abuse of power and impunity in future

    Mobile money discounting and currency abandonment : livelihoods and monetary practices in rural Binga, Zimbabwe

    Get PDF
    The convergence of money with technology is dominated by the drive to eradicate cash by digitization, this is legitimised by arguments that digital forms of money will promote financial inclusion and, in the process, alleviate poverty in developing countries. However, the positive societal benefits attributed to digital money are increasingly being contradicted by empirical evidence from developing countries. The emerging contestation of digitization of money as a tool for poverty alleviation creates an opportunity to reconceptualise monetary innovations for people living in poverty. Thus, in this thesis I answered the following question; what new insights can monetary practices of rural households and persons reveal about money and monetary innovations (or needs) of the low-income group? To answer this question, I draw on the SLA and infrastructure concept not only to examine monetary practices of households and persons in Binga, a rural district of Zimbabwe with a colonial and postcolonial history of economic and political marginalization, but also to evaluate the technical and or functional properties of the money which they use. My research revealed a number of interrelated phenomena, the most important of which is currency abandonment phenomena. It takes two forms, namely, outright refusal to use and adopt a currency and or by discounting (price inflation of goods and services mediated in the currency that is being abandoned). Pertinent examples include; (1) mobile money discounting (this is due to excessive mobile money transaction fees), (2) financial disintermediation, in which users of both mobile and bank money deliberately made their financial affairs opaque by rejecting digital money in preference for cash and commodity money. There are historical antecedents for what I call currency abandonment, these include; (1) the black Friday (holders of capital devalued the Zimbabwe dollar by dumping it on the stock and money market after the Zimbabwe government paid out ex-combatant’s gratuities from money that it did not have, (2) the catalytic role of households in dollarization, which is the rejection (by ordinary users) of the inflationary Zimbabwe dollar in preference for foreign currency. These activities were a means by ordinary users to resist the fact that digitization is experienced as a form of exploitation, in particular rent seeking and indiscriminate identity harvesting (monetization of personal identity) by both the government and mobile network operators. The most relevant research and policy theme which emerged from this study is the economic exclusion problem, in turn, the most important solution to economic exclusion was found to be sharing and redistribution, exemplified by provisioning of public infrastructures, Zimbabwe government elderly and disabilities cash grant, mulala cattle (livestock sharing), poor to poor mobile remittances and rotational saving scheme in which interest rates were not a reward for risk, but shared by all members as a reward for cooperation and collaboration. This study concludes by proposing a locally informed sociotechnical framework of monetary innovations for people living in poverty. The framework divides monetary needs into secondary and primary needs, the former consists of the Public Authority Deficit, which emphasises the need to address the subjugated position of developing countries in defining and addressing monetary needs of the unbanked-poor and the Quantitative Deficit (mutually exclusive relationship between the role of money as a medium of exchange and store of value) while the latter is represented by the Qualitative Deficit (failure of notes and coins to combine the unit of account role of money with the identity of transacting parties). The framework presented here relegates digital money to a secondary need (or innovation) which is inconsequential to poverty alleviation, but necessary only in facilitating remote payments.Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2020.The Mellon FoundationAnthropology and ArchaeologyPhDUnrestricte
    corecore