Driving Digital Transformation

Author:

Ndulu Benno1,Stuart Elizabeth2,Dercon Stefan3,Knaack Peter4

Affiliation:

1. Formerly Visiting Associate, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

2. Executive Director, Digital Pathways at Oxford, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

3. Professor of Economic Policy, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

4. Adjunct Professor, School of International Service, American University

Abstract

Abstract This book traces the experience of digital economic transformation in seven developing countries, providing insights for policymakers and practitioners in similar situations as well as lessons for outsiders trying to support government reform efforts more broadly. In one country, the prime minister pushes for the liberalization of digital finance as a central pillar of the country’s national strategy, while the central bank almost makes it a criminal offence. In another, the digital minister tries to scupper the very process to support digital transformation that the president has asked them to co-lead. This book gives a ringside seat on seven developing countries’ tumultuous early steps on the path to a reform of the economy and the government using technology. Written by a group of academics and practitioners from Oxford at the heart of the process, but foregrounding the voices of the policymakers and participants, this book documents and critically assesses efforts to assist a set of governments to kick-start digital transformation. In doing so, it offers lessons for policymakers in other countries. But beyond that, it is an exposition of the process of policymaking more generally in the 2020s, and offers a broader insight as to how outsiders can play a sensible role in other reform processes in developing and emerging countries.

Publisher

Oxford University PressOxford

Reference235 articles.

1. Aaronson, Susan Ariel. ‘Data is Different: Why the World Needs a New Approach to Governing Cross-Border Data Flows—Centre for International Governance Innovation’. Centre for International Governance Innovation, 14 November 2018. https://www.cigionline.org/publications/data-different-why-world-needs-new-approach-governing-cross-border-data-flows.

2. Access to Information Programme, Prime Minister’s Office. ‘Digital Bangladesh Concept Note’, 5 November 2009. http://btri.portal.gov.bd/sites/default/files/files/btri.portal.gov.bd/page/a556434c_e9c9_4269_9f4e_df75d712604d/Digital%20Bangladesh%20Concept%20Note_Final.pdf.

3. Access to Information Programme, Prime Minister’s Office. ‘Strategic Priorities of Digital Bangladesh’, January 2011. https://a2i.gov.bd/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/4-Strategy_Digital_Bangladesh_2011.pdf.

4. De Facto Political Power and Institutional Persistence;American Economic Review,2006

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