2024 kept us busy as core developers of DPI systems worldwide. And 2025 is shaping up to be even busier. With DPI driving digital government transformation, adoption is accelerating as countries tackle challenges in governance, funding and resilience. The OECD - OCDE’s latest policy paper dives into DPI’s enablers while addressing the big questions: Who owns DPI? Who funds it? How can it be governed sustainably? Learn more 👇 #DPI #digitalgovernment #personalgovernment
Senior Vice President - Global Public Sector at Nortal. 🌐 Leading research, policies and tech to improve public service delivery, efficiency, trust and resilience.
State of DPI in 2024 going into '25. The recently published policy paper by OECD Public Governance on Digital Public Infrastructure is a good read for all digital government leaders. DPI is necessary for enabling modern digital governments and digital-first public services. The paper suggests system of thinking for #DPI with examples from various countries with existing DPI, analyzing different funding mechanisms and governance models. Globally, DPI as a "package of digital government enablers" has been growing for several years to fight the widening digital gap well covered earlier this year in UN e-Government Survey 2024 (link: https://lnkd.in/d--WTeTn). International donors specifically have taken interest (see the excellent post by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on DPI - https://lnkd.in/dvyRB9pq), supported by international surveys and research such as the excellent DPI map (.org) by UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose (IIPP) and David Eaves, or more widely baseline requirements provided by UNDP and Office of the UN Secretary-General’s Envoy on Technology in the DPI Safeguards guideline (link here: https://lnkd.in/dUCAsgsN). Another example is GovStack, an international coalition supporting the development of DPIs by facilitating specifications and best-practices. In Europe, many nation-states already have various levels of DPI developed and many regulations and EU-level programs are in place to focus development of cross-border use-cases, such as EIDAS for developing cross-EU identity wallet or data spaces initiatives pushed by EU and Gaia-X Association for Data and Cloud (AISBL), to name a few. However, the debate is rising over the "public" - who should own DPI, how to fund and govern DPI? The questions related to digital sovereignty. This has paved way for concepts such as Digital Commons (see here: https://lnkd.in/dwbuKWMZ and here: https://lnkd.in/dYsH4XJn by NGI Commons), a concept comparable to UN Digital Public Goods idea. A good and successful case-study here is how multilateral organizations, such as Nordic Institute for Interoperability Solutions (NIIS), have been way of developing, co-funding and governing DPI, a collaboration started by Estonian and Finnish governments for governing the co-development of x-Road, the government interoperability framework. For us, being long-time core developers of DPI systems (x-Road, digital identity systems, single digital gateways etc, in Europe, North America, Middle-East and Africa), 2024 was a very busy year, but will be even busier in 2025. With some elements of DPI also being key enablers for use of AI in digital public services, we surely will see much more adoption of DPI in 2025 and forward.