97 Copyright © 2012, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited. Chapter 7 DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-1637-0.ch007 Airi Ifnedo NAV Solutions, Canada Princely Ifnedo Cape Breton University, Canada The Infuence of National IT Policies, Socio-economic Factors, and National Culture on Network Readiness in Africa ABSTRACT This study examines the infuence of national IT policies, socio-economic and cultural factors on the network readiness of African countries. The capability and level of preparation of a nation to partici- pate in and beneft from information and communication technologies (ICT) for socio-development is assessed by the network readiness index. Prior studies have shown that such factors have a signifcant infuence on how a country benefts from its use of ICT products for development. Research on this topic with data from the African continent is rare. This study serves to fll this gap. It is based on data from a cross-section of twenty diverse African countries. The data suggested variability in the use of ICT for developmental purposes among the sampled countries. To that end, Africa should not be viewed as monolithic in such respects. The study showed that all the measures used to operationalize national IT policies, socio-economic and some cultural factors are positively related to the network readiness of the sampled African countries. Importantly, the quality of each country’s educational systems, its trans- parency (corruption) levels, its ICT regulatory framework, and its cross-cultural dimension of power distance (PDI) were found to have signifcant relevance to its network readiness. The implications of the study’s fndings for research and policy making are discussed.