CAF will reach 35% green financing in 2024
November 19, 2024
The two agencies held an online workshop to launch a CAF/OECD initiative titled “Going Digital: Review of Digital Government in Latin America.”
June 24, 2020
More than 50 officials and specialists from the governments of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Barbados, Colombia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Jamaica, Mexico, Panama, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Trinidad and Tobago and Uruguay, shared experiences on the implementation of digital government policies that can favor progress towards more resilient and responsive governments.
The Going Digital initiative aims to make a qualitative analysis of the current state of digital government policies and initiatives in each of CAF’s member countries, identifying trends, strengths and challenges for an effective and sustainable digital transformation of the region. The end result of this work will be a strategic study that will be available during the second half of 2021, with public policy recommendations at a regional scale, as well as a brief overview at the national and/or sub-national level.
The workshop was kicked off by Pablo Sanguinetti, CAF Vice President of Knowledge, CAF Director of Digital Innovation of the State, Carlos Santiso, Edwin Lau, Senior Director of the Directorate of Public Governance, and Barbara Ubaldi, leader of the Digital Government and Open Data Unit, representing the OECD.
Subsequently, participants presented government experiences in response to the COVID-19 crisis, and how digital governance and strategic use of data have contributed to streamlining and adapting the public sector to react to this new context, and in particular in enabling policies and implementing actions.
Barbara Ubaldi presented a framework for analysis and the experiences and lessons learned from OECD countries, while Maria Isabel Mejía, senior digital government specialist at CAF, presented evidence in Latin America, emphasizing that governments in the region have relied on data, artificial intelligence and new technologies to monitor, address and forecast the evolution of the pandemic, with the aim of designing and implementing public policies and taking measures to mitigate the impacts of the health care, economic and social crisis.
Siim Sikkut, Estonian Head of Digital Government and Jessica McEvoy, Deputy Director of National and International Research at the UK Government Digital Service (GDS), also presented the measures their governments have taken during the COVID-19 crisis, by enhancing the use of data in the provision of the services required during this healthcare crisis and lockdown, with a particular approach to providing public organizations with the necessary tools to implement digital solutions in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In both cases, the importance of having operational digital platforms and officials with the skills necessary for online work to ensure continuity of provision of services required by the people was evident. Estonia implemented innovative solutions in the way health care services are provided, encouraging electronic consultation. In addition, government agencies in the United Kingdom, with the support of the GDS, designed a number of new services for citizens in a matter of days, capitalizing on the capabilities they had already developed and working collaboratively with the private sector.
Subsequently, a working session was held in which the participating countries were divided into four parallel online rooms. Using a training methodology and a digital tool that enabled interaction and discussion among participants, delegates from each country identified the strengths of their digital governance strategies, the main problems, as well as possible solutions
The conclusions of the workshop included:
November 19, 2024
November 19, 2024
November 19, 2024