Bas on the UN e-Government Survey 2014, the organizers look at countries that belong to the ‘most advanc countries in the world in the area of digital government’. The Netherlands is also on this list, which is why I was allow to give a presentation on how Dutch municipalities deal with social mia and the bottlenecks they encounter. In addition to myself, there were speakers from Australia, Singapore, Korea, England, France and Estonia. I would like to share a number of profitability continues to improve inspiring examples from their presentations with you. All presentations can be found on the congress website under the heading ‘conteúdo’.
Brazilian digitalization in numbers
Why does Brazil want to go digital? Here are some figures about Brazil:
In 2013, the country was home to approximately 201 million people
There are 197 million broadband internet connections
281.7 million mobile phones
105 million internet users
Social Mia usage: 70 million Facebook
(35%), 41.2 million Twitter (20%), 19 million Linkin (9.5%), 17.6 million Skype (8.75%) and 4 million Flickr (2%)
25 Brazilian companies are in the Global Fortune 2000
Leading the way in digital services
So, Brazilians are already quite digital, but the government is lagging behind. According to caseno email listAroldo Craz, Prime Minister of the Feral Court of Auditors, Brazil wants to be at the forefront of digital services because this:
Transparency increasesThe integration of
Resident participation stimulates
Brings more efficiency within the government
According to the Harvard Business Review of February 2015, Brazil is a “break out” country. the course is aimed at They are making fairly rapid progress in digital evolution, but still score relatively low on four factors on the digital evolution index . Incidentally, the Netherlands is list in this table as a ‘stall out’ country. We score high on the four factors, but are ‘rapidly recing’ on the rate of change in digital evolution between 2008 and 2013.