The findings provide a global yardstick for digital public‑service maturity and data openness, guiding policymakers and investors toward priority reforms.
Digital transformation has become a strategic imperative for governments seeking to meet rising citizen expectations and improve policy outcomes. By benchmarking digital readiness, the OECD’s Digital Government Index offers a comparative lens that highlights where public sectors excel in integrating technology, data analytics, and user‑centric design, and where they lag behind. This perspective helps ministries prioritize investments in interoperable platforms, cybersecurity, and digital skills, ensuring that modernization efforts are both scalable and resilient.
The Open, Useful and Re‑usable Data Index complements the DGI by measuring the breadth and depth of national open‑data policies. It assesses legal frameworks, data portals, and the re‑usability of datasets, drawing on a two‑year window of activity (2023‑2024). By quantifying openness, the index reveals how transparent data ecosystems can fuel innovation, boost economic growth, and enhance public accountability. Countries that score high typically combine strong legislative mandates with active data stewardship programs, creating ecosystems where businesses and civil society can readily access and repurpose government information.
For decision‑makers, the combined insights from DGI and OURdata serve as a roadmap for future reforms. The uneven performance across regions signals opportunities for cross‑border collaboration and knowledge transfer, while the upcoming 2026 Outlook will likely shape funding allocations from multilateral institutions. Stakeholders—from tech vendors to NGOs—can leverage these benchmarks to tailor solutions that address specific digital gaps, ultimately accelerating the transition toward smarter, more inclusive public services.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...