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Creating learning organization for continuous data-driven public sector Twinning project Moldova, 21-22 February 2017 Content for this morning Action plan “Modernization of public service” BIG DATA for growth and wellbeing Maximizing the value of data Creating learning organization for continuous data-driven public sector Digital transformation in Lithuanian public administration Action plan for implementation of the Strategy of Public administration reform in Moldova 2016-2020 Public Administration Reform Strategy for Moldova Moldova Government Decision No. 911 Objective – to set up a modern, efficient, professional public administration, oriented to provide high-quality public service according to the needs and expectations of citizens and social and economic entities. The main directions of the reform: – Accountability of public administration – Development and coordination of public policies – Modernization of public services – Public finance management – Civil service and human resources management Public Administration Reform Strategy for Moldova Modernization of public services General objective Developing the supply of public administrative services at central and local level, by improving access to these services in various ways, the efficiency of their performance, reducing unnecessary administrative burdens and minimizing the cost of services for both beneficiaries and service providers, and effectiveness, according to beneficiaries’ needs and requirements, ensuring a stable level of quality of the services performed. Public Administration Reform Strategy for Moldova Modernization of public services Specific objectives: • Ensuring a coordinated and unified approach to modernisation of public services – The development of regulatory and methodological framework for ensuring the modernisation of public services, increasing the efficiency and increase the accessibility of and implementation of standards of quality and cost for public services – Strengthening institutional capacity building and human capacity to implement initiatives for modernising public services in the State Chancellery and public authorities in charge of public services • Increase the quality and accessibility of public services by re-engineering operational processes and by digitization, as well as by creating the network of universal public service provision centers – Removing outdated public services and public services reingineria priority – The digitisation of public services previously subject to reinginerie process – Developing and piloting the concept of centre of universal public service BIG DATA Key points • Data and information are resources of crucial importance to any country and society • Data is raw resource, like crude oil, yet its volume is growing (as opposed to oil ) • Considerable added value can be created using data creatively – Data Economy potential • Data Economy and Data Value Chain require proactive steps to create them Digital Universe Keeps Exploding Data is the new oil o o o o o Extract Refine Deliver Transform Use for profit ENHANCED DATA ACCESS Maximizing the value of data Maximizing the value of data • WHY IS ENHANCED ACCESS TO DATA IMPORTANT? • WHAT ARE THE MAIN EMPIRICAL FINDINGS? • WHAT DO WE NEED TO CONSIDER? • RECOMMENDATIONS Data is not oil, but an infrastructure with large spill-overs • Data is non-rivalrous (but excludable) – Data re-use and non-discriminatory access can maximize its value – Data enables multi-sided markets • Data is a capital with increasing returns – Data can be re-used as input for further production – Data linkage is a key source for super-additive insights • Data is a general purpose input without intrinsic value – Data are an input for multiple purposes – Its value depends on complementary factors related to the capacity to extract information (e.g. skills, software) Data driven innovation DATA DRIVEN INNOVATION (DDI) – the use of data and analytics to improve or foster new products, processes, organizational methods and markets and it is a new source of growth. DDI is not only about big data, it is about the data value cycle Data specialists skills, key to adopting data analytics Knowledge base Decision making Value added growth and well-being Enhance data access vv Data analytics (software & skills) Enhance data analytic capacities Datafication & data collection Big data Enhance data quality Data value cycle with their key types of actors 101 0 0 1 1 Datafication and data collection Data providers • Governments • Consumers • Data brokers Data analytics & software Data analytics providers Decision making Data-driven entrepreneurs • Hardware providers • Start-ups and incumbents • Software providers • Civil entrepreneurs • Consultancy services • Governments Data value cycle and confluence of key trends and enabling factors 101 0 0 1 1 Dattafication and data collection Exponential growth of data • Digitization • Open data • Fast and open Internet • Internet of Things Data analytics & software Adoption of data analytics Decision making Paradigm shifts from informing to driving decisions making • Machine learning • Analytics (algorithms) • Cloud computing • Data specialist skills • Automated decision making • Culture and data experiments Main phases of the data value cycle with their key types of data specialist occupations Data specialists skills, key to adopting data analytics 101 0 0 1 1 Datafication and data collection Data analytics & software Data collectors and administrators Data analytics • Data entry clerks • Statisticians • Database designers and administrators • Actuaries • Scientists • Analysts Data scientists Decision making Decision-makers • Managers • Engineers Striking the right balance between openness and closeness Individuals privacy confidentiality Close(ness) multi-purpose reuse Prevent social and economic harm free flow of data user lock-in walled garden digital security open data Enable spill-over effects Openness data portability data sharing Prevent loss of profit open APIs open standards IPRs (e.g.trade secrets) Organizations algorithmic transparency Data openness is not a binary concept but spans a data commons continuum Level 0: Access only by data controller (close data) Level 1: (Discriminatory) Access by stakeholders Level 2: Access by community members Level 3: Access by the public More open Data portability Data Sharing within PPPs Open Data Maximizing the value of data • WHY IS ENHANCED ACCESS TO DATA IMPORTANT? • WHAT ARE THE MAIN EMPIRICAL FINDINGS? • WHAT DO WE NEED TO CONSIDER? • RECOMMENDATIONS Macroeconomic impact assessment studies on enhanced data access For OECD countries, the PSI market is estimated to be USD 111 billion by 2010 => aggregate impact of USD 700 billion in 2010 (overall 1.5% of GDP; OECD, 2015b). Direct market size of the PSI is 55,3 billion EUR for 2016 and expected to grow by 36,9% by 2020 in the EU 28+” For the United Kingdom, the PSI market is estimated to be GBP 1.8 billion per year => aggregate impact of GBP 5 billion per year (overall 0.5% of GDP; Shakespeare review, 2013). For Lithuania the PSI market is estimated to be EUR 800 million per year => (overall contributing 2% of GDP; State Audit Office report, 2016). For G20 countries, open data policies could increase output by around USD 13 trillion over the next five years (overall 1% of GDP; Omidyar Network, 2014). Including public and private sector data, McKinsey Global Institute estimates that the reuse of open data in seven areas of the global economy could help create value worth USD 3 trillion a year worldwide (4% of GDP; MGI, 2013) Mobile number portability (MNP) can encourage switching, and as a result can reduce average prices in telecommunication services (by 6% to up to 12%). Maximizing the value of data • WHY IS ENHANCED ACCESS TO DATA IMPORTANT? • WHAT ARE THE MAIN EMPIRICAL FINDINGS? • WHAT DO WE NEED TO CONSIDER? • RECOMMENDATIONS To consider when planning a big data project • Scope: Data for which the value for society (social value) is larger than their value for the individual member of society (private value). • Data may include: – personal and non-personal data; – public and private sector data; – volunteered, observed and inferred data • Should the scope be broaden / narrowed? • Are there other means for enhancing access to data that we should consider? • Are there specific frameworks for enhancing data access that we should consider? Maximizing the value of data • WHY IS ENHANCED ACCESS TO DATA IMPORTANT? • WHAT ARE THE MAIN EMPIRICAL FINDINGS? • WHAT DO WE NEED TO CONSIDER? • RECOMMENDATIONS Recommendation on Access to Research Data from Public Funding • Openness “means access on equal terms for the international research community …” • [Pricing:] “… at the lowest possible cost, preferably at no more than the marginal cost of dissemination”. • Transparency: Information on research data […] should be internationally available in a transparent way. • IPR: “Data access arrangements should consider the applicability of copyright […] of other intellectual property laws that may be relevant […]” Creating learning organization for continuous driven public sector innovation Key questions for the government CTO in driving digital transformation • How can the public sector leverage new analytics to make better decisions? • What is the most effective way to use digital platforms to transform government programs? • How can the CTO structure a strong governance framework to optimize the value of new and open data? • What does the effective organizational architecture look like for digital government? How can the public sector leverage new analytics to make better decisions? • The government CTO can unlock significant decision-making power by using data analytics effectively. • Governments are the original “big data” entities and manage technologies that provide services to billions of people across the globe. • The critical issue is how policymakers can best use new, big and dynamic data sets to make policy decisions, from designing policies through to monitoring and evaluating them. • For the CTO, supporting better decisions involves several key considerations: - Tackle how data is designed and collated; - Integrate data sets fully into the policymaking process; - Invest in innovation (new analytical tools). Key takeaways: New analytics for better decisions • New, big and dynamic data sets are valuable where they make decisions faster and more accurate. Design and collate data sets that use new sources and formats. • Drive data and analytics through the policymaking process. Support the introduction of custom metrics and analytical tools in policy design, monitoring and evaluation, and budgeting decisions. • Invest in new analytical tools to maximize the value of new, granular information, Public R&D and innovation teams are important. Key questions for the government CTO in driving digital transformation • How can the public sector leverage new analytics to make better decisions? • What is the most effective way to use digital platforms to transform government programs? • How can the CTO structure a strong governance framework to optimize the value of new and open data? • What does the effective organizational architecture look like for digital government? What is the most effective way to use digital platforms to transform government programs? • With increasing decision-making powers, digital platforms also offer significant opportunity for governments to make their activities more relevant to their citizens and address changing policy challenges. • To use digital to make „citizen-centric“ service more effective, including through enabling more complex offerings. • Focal points: – Ensure citizen engagement; – Rethink policy issues from citizens‘ perspective and see how digital platforms can repackage, or realign, government services to meet these issues; – Take an immersive to the design of proposed reforms and new offerings. Key takeaways: Digital platforms for effective government programs • Use digital to make government services increasingly citizen-centric. Collaborate with citizens to identify needs, and organize information to promote collaboration on solutions development. • Digital platforms allow governments to break down silos and reorganise operations and delivery around policy issues. • Take advantage of the rapid implementation and real-time feedback digital can provide to experiment with the design and reform of public services. Key questions for the government CTO in driving digital transformation • How can the public sector leverage new analytics to make better decisions? • What is the most effective way to use digital platforms to transform government programs? • How can the CTO structure a strong governance framework to optimize the value of new and open data? • What does the effective organizational architecture look like for digital government? How can the CTO structure a strong governance framework to optimize the value of new and open data? • As governments build digital tools and platforms to provide access to troves of public data, actively solicit input from citizens and collect information from businesses, it’s more important than ever to protect these assets while optimizing their use. • There are two critical pillars for the CTO to address. – First, ensure privacy and security. – Second, use an open, digital model to enable access to the information and support its integrity. Government-civic collaboration through social media, crowdsourcing and other two-way information flows are potentially powerful. Key takeaways: Effective governance for digital government • Whole-of-government standards on privacy and security, and clear rules on personally identifiable information, are critical for migration to digital government. • The governance of information is changing with open data and open development. Data standards and interoperability share power with citizens. Accordingly, governments will need to monitor and manage the quality of new data and solutions. • The vast amounts of information published by governments need high standards of quality. Independent review of methodologies, digital formats and data-set outputs to ensure data integrity are essential. Key questions for the government CTO in driving digital transformation • How can the public sector leverage new analytics to make better decisions? • What is the most effective way to use digital platforms to transform government programs? • How can the CTO structure a strong governance framework to optimize the value of new and open data? • What does the effective organizational architecture look like for digital government? What does the effective organizational architecture look like for digital government? • Digital government demands a new organizational structure for technology to support the transparent, citizen-centric services it aims to provide. • Key drivers: – Share resources across departments; – Coordinate decisions across government organizations. Key takeaways: Organizational architecture for digital government • A platform approach to digital government, organized around users needs and data, is most effective. • Centralized management oversight from the CTO office is essential for digital transformation under this model, including on service design and procurement. • Intra-agency coordination is critical to deliver on the CTO’s overarching strategy. The CTO can drive connectivity and shared standards through the digital government model. Digital transformation in Lithuanian public administration SIRIP (movie) Lithuania SIRIP • • • • • State Information Resource Interoperability Platform Digital e-services platform architecture Plug and play approach for creating new apps Common identity sign-on service Common payments and digital signatures Law on State Information Resource management sets un obligation for state institutions to use the SIRIP platform The usage of the SIRIP as one of the conditions for allocating funding for IT projects (measure: expenses considered as not eligible if you are not using SIRIP for data exchange) institutions providing e-services has to ensure their availability through the SIRIP Portal – eGovernment Gateway Utilization of SIRIP in the large scale development projects of e services Firstly, SIRIP is "the one window", which is available to residents and business operators in the provision of public electronic services. This means that all public electronic services provided by State and municipal authorities are accessible through a single portal – e-Government Gateway Secondly, the SIRIP provides shared solutions for developing and providing electronic services to the authorities. The SIRIP service is: 1) data exchange between the institutions; 2) personal identification in the electronic space; 3) payment solution for state fees or other compensation for the provision of public and administrative services. . Thirdly, SIRIP is the multifunctional platform, suitable for electronic services: - SIRIP gives opportunities to develop electronic services by taking advantage of the infrastructure of the SIRIP; - 60 e-services in all municipalities (65) have been designed in such a way. The project "Centralized deployment of municipal services on line" Objectives of the project: Phase I. Moving 60 electronic services provided by municipalities on line and providing all the necessary tools to provide the services on line. Phase II. Reproduction of 65 on line municipal services from 4 pilot municipalities to all municipalities During the project: designed electronic services through data exchange with 29 registers and information systems, by exploiting possibilities to complete automatically requested information; created MEGA process, consisting of sub-processes and adapted to the various configurations; designed data exchange component that standardise the exchange among the document management systems. Project results/benefits: Created equal conditions for all business and citizen to use electronic municipal services; One of the most challenging and complex project on E-Services; The project reunited a vast number of stakeholders; Project completed in a relative short time; Largest number of developed electronic services in one project in Lithuania; The maximum social and economic benefit created. Fourthly, by using the SIRIP component the birth of the child-related electronic service has been developed: 5 separate electronic services are available as “one stop shop” (registration of birth of the child, the declaration of the place of residence, the one-off childbirth allowance, maternity leave allowance, a request for maternity leave to the employer). Evidence based decision making (Lithuania) Evidence based policies for the Digital Economy • What are the current ICT measurement priorities in your country? Measurement activities where most resources are allocated and statistics for which you receive most requests from the government • What new ICT measurement priorities are emerging in your country? New measurement activities, existing activities where you plan to invest more and statistics for which you receive increasing demand from the government • What is the balance among different tools for ICT data collection in your country? For example: ICT surveys, data linking from different statistical surveys and/or administrative sources, private source data, Internet-based data, etc. Project - Discover DAT (Office of the Government with Kaunas University of Technology) • Cross-sectoral problem sensing and problem definition is one of the needs for policy makers and analysts at the national level. • Although there are initiatives that attempt or will attempt to address some parts of this need, there is a lack of methodologies and tools to aggregate multiple sources of data (e.g., not just relying on data from social media), to involve different stakeholders and to follow the policy process at the same time. • There is also a specific need to communicate this type of evidence to different stakeholders with different levels of data analysis sophistication, namely politicians, public managers, analysts and ordinary citizens. • Another need is to integrate this data analysis/visualization functionality with citizen participation functionality within official e-government citizen participation gateway at http://epilietis.lrv.lt/. Project Discover DAT • DiscoverDAT aims at developing a framework for evidence-based participatory policy development at all stages and levels of governance by creating methods and tools for data discovery and exploitation within and across diverse data sets and digital traces. • DiscoverDAT will contribute to the discovery of relevant data, patterns, and correlations across structured and unstructured data, facts and opinions, from different domains. • DiscoverDAT will adopt a holistic approach in which data discovery and process is enabled by both technological tools and the design thinking methodologies for engaging stakeholders, including citizens, in policy development. Desired outcome of the project Discover DAT • The tool for scanning the data for emerging problems (‚problem sensing‘) and its integration or use in the actual process of public consultations process hosted by the Office of the Government. The identification of potential problems in the selected domain will enable to monitor existing policies and indicates the need for action. • To develop and to test mechanism that will allow citizens and policy makers interact with data and to take policy actions based on that data. • To develop specific recommendations how to create a set of processes, methods, and tools based on a design-thinking approach to policy making, enabling the participation of a broad base of people that can jointly and interactively make sense of data for the purposes of informing a policy. Lithuania in 2020 ? more than 621 advances e services available (via SIRIP) more than 336 interoperable information systems and registers to start a business, to get the driving license E service provision is citizen-centered Functional IT solutions that are integrated with the EU IT solutions (Digital single market) e Delivery, e Identification, e Health e Delivery, e Power or attorney; e Payment Developed the main shared IT solutions (IT enablers) for all institutions to avoid duplication and cost increase when designing e services e.g. SIRIP, open data portal, Functional platforms for design and provision of e services, (e service portal - gateway) e Government gateway e health gateway Part of services are provided only electronically (Digital by Default) e.g. application to Universitete Moving IT service provision to cloud (consolidating the shared IT services in the service centers – Public and Private) Thank you Daiva KIRKILAITĖ-CHETCUTI Head of Information Society Division Office of the Government [email protected] www.lrv.lt Gedimino ave. 11, Vilnius +370 (706) 63 871