Accelerating the Public Sector’s Digital Transition
May 29, 2019
The Campus Party included for the first time in its history a GovTech Latam Forum that brought together digital startups with a public vocation and social impact.
July 02, 2019
The Campus Party, one of the largest innovation and entrepreneurship events worldwide, returned to Colombia, bringing together more than 5000 people for five days. For the first time in its history, it included a GovTech Latam Forum, which brought together digital startups with a public vocation and social impact.
This first GovTech forum in the region provided a meeting point between the public and private sectors to share technological trends to solve public challenges and identify solutions based on disruptive technologies that will generate more and better services for citizens.
For Carlos Santiso, Director of Digital Innovation of the State at CAF, “new public-private partnerships are needed to incubate and drive innovation in the public sector. The challenge of the region is that we have 21st century societies with 20th century states.” In this sense, GovTechs, as data-driven digital startups, can offer their products or services to governments, to help them act with streamlined, open and innovative procedures.
“Govtechs are becoming the most promising trend to transform governments. We are experiencing a paradigm shift, Santiso noted, from a digital government or e-government, to a smart government or i-government. It is not just about opening up data, but about effectively using them to improve public policies and services, and ultimately, improve people’s lives.”
The global market value of the GovTech business is estimated at US$1 trillion by 2025. This is largely due to the opportunity to tackle new economic sectors and the cost and efficiency savings these projects may represent for governments.
In Latin America, many digital startups are emerging, often leveraging public data opened by governments themselves. GovTech ecosystems are rapidly maturing in several countries in the region, generating concrete public value, impacting the quality of public spending, and even enabling significant savings for national treasuries. Particularly noteworthy is that many of these startups are concentrated in cities and focus on the digital modernization of municipal governments.
Below are some examples of GovTech startups are emerging in the region:
Because of the potential impact these companies can have on the region, CAF has unveiled its agenda to support GovTech ecosystems in the region, which includes the following axes:
November 19, 2024
November 19, 2024
November 19, 2024
May 29, 2019