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The Netherlands' Digitalisation Strategy

Joint acceleration is the only option

The Netherlands faces major societal challenges in a rapidly changing environment, and digitalisation is key to the solutions. As such, investment in our digital foundation is vital for the Netherlands and the major challenges our society faces. The government is one of the largest consumers of digital services, making it a driver of digital developments essential for a resilient society and a prosperous, productive and forward-looking economy.

As a government, we have been discussing the same goals for around 25 years, such as focusing our services on citizens and entrepreneurs, optimising accessibility and improving our data exchange. Progress in these areas has been insufficient so far, as they have largely been tackled by government organisations individually. In the past, we mainly looked at what needed to be done, instead of how to do it collectively. Digitalisation is now a hot topic politically, and the need for change has been stated repeatedly. In recent years, key national and international organisations have produced numerous recommendations and reports on digital developments [1] , including specifically about digitalisation in government [2].

All of these reports share a commonality: the future is digital, and the development of digitalisation cannot happen without targeted central coordination. The government is currently struggling with problematic legacy systems, services that are insufficiently aligned with the needs of citizens and entrepreneurs, fragmented policies, and the need to strengthen digital security and resilience.

As such, the cabinet emphasises the need for a different approach. To achieve breakthroughs, we must get to work now: seeking collaboration, simplifying where possible, and accelerating development. We will collaborate at all levels of government to determine how it can be done. Instead of drafting new policy for each level of government, we must focus on collective acceleration with government authorities and the market, while maintaining an ongoing dialogue with society and parliament. After all, the average citizen sees one government, not the decentralised state as envisaged by J.R. Thorbecke with the central government, provinces, water boards and municipalities as separate levels of government. In this day and age, we can no longer afford to operate as individual organisations. We live in a single, digital house of Thorbecke, in which all government organisations are united.

With the Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy, we—the central government, provinces, municipalities, water boards and public service providers—will prioritise the topics with the greatest urgency and impact. We want to accelerate development by enabling breakthroughs and removing obstacles through political and administrative management. The key to success lies in good coordination and cooperation among all government organisations.

While pursuing these ambitions, we must not lose sight of the importance of public values—including legal certainty—in digitalisation policy. This ranges from data protection safeguards to the continued provision of support to citizens, entrepreneurs and public servants who struggle to keep up with digital developments [3].

The need for one government in the digital world

Individual organisations each have their own cloud strategies, cybersecurity approaches, incompatible legacy systems, separated data silos and their own versions of a comparable AI system. This fragmentation stands in the way of strengthening our resilience, improving services, accelerating development and ensuring quality. The rate of technological change, labour market shortages and geopolitical developments all require us to join forces. The EU Digital Decade goals [4], such as those concerning the digitalisation of public services, high-quality digital professionals and digital resilience and autonomy, further add to the urgency.

Starting today, we are taking a different approach, choosing a limited number of priorities to tackle collectively, subject to collectively agreed targets and with mutual accountability. This approach still leaves room for individual organisations to make their own choices on topics [5].

The Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy operates on the principle of ‘centralised agreement, federated design’. Based on mutual agreements, government organisations will implement standards and develop joint solutions and building blocks in their own organisations. They will do so at their own pace, working towards the agreed-upon target, and we commit to holding each other to those targets. With this approach, government authorities will cooperate as partners in the digital house of Thorbecke, eliminating compartmentalisation.

We will reinforce and future-proof our digital foundation. This requires investment in digital government. Digital technologies involving cloud, data and AI are key here. By investing in these technologies, we can further modernise services for people in the Netherlands and increase our resilience. This necessitates further development of public servants’ digital skills and a modern workspace to help them do their jobs better.

The Netherlands Digitalisation Strategy

The Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy is one of the cornerstones of the cabinet’s digitalisation policy. Together with the Digital Economy Strategy [6] and the Netherlands Cybersecurity Strategy, the Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy is fundamental to the cabinet’s digitalisation policy [7].

The cabinet policy is based on the following principles:

  • The Netherlands must seize the opportunities presented by digitalisation. With the Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy, we must innovate and continue to invest in our digital foundation to succeed in our major societal challenges in areas such as healthcare, spatial planning and the labour market.
  • Together with the EU, the Netherlands will focus on strategic autonomy, both in the physical and the digital world. That does not mean doing everything ourselves, but rather that we will improve our control of our critical processes and data.
  • The Netherlands will seek more intensive collaboration with the business community and science and knowledge institutions to connect the digital economy and government and collaborate towards the Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy targets.
  • Instead of simply making paper processes digital, the Netherlands will redesign existing government processes where necessary to take full advantage of the opportunities of digitalisation. This includes the transition to truly data-driven working as 1 government, in collaboration with the market and knowledge institutions.

We will execute this as 1 government with 6 interconnected priorities.

Endnotes

  1. This includes reports such as ‘Mission AI. The New System Technology’ by the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy, and ‘Sturen of gestuurd worden’ by the Dutch Council for Public Administration. back [1]
  2. E.g., ‘De Belgen doen het Beter’ or the report ‘Maak Waar!’ by the Studiegroep Informatiesamenleving en Overheid (Maak waar! | Report | Public Administration Knowledge Base). back [2]
  3. We will retain attention and room for a human-centric approach and tailored solutions for citizens, entrepreneurs, and government organisations, as well as how digitalisation can support that. As stated in the government programme, the current cabinet wants the government to be easily accessible to citizens at the service desk, by phone, in writing, and digitally. back [3]
  4. Europe’s Digital Decade: Digital Targets for 2030 | European Commission. back [4]
  5. The Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy does not cover all issues within the broader topic of digitalisation. However, this does not mean that no progress is being made on those issues. Several major projects are already underway in the field of information management, for example. back [5]
  6. The Minister of Justice and Security is responsible for the coordination of cybersecurity policy, implemented through the cabinet-wide Netherlands Cybersecurity Strategy. The Minister of Economic Affairs is responsible for the digital economy and implements this through the Digital Economy Strategy, among other things. Decision-making on these strategies is conducted through the associated governance structures. back [6]
  7. Existing digital government strategies are being aligned with the Netherlands’ Digitalisation Strategy. back [7]

Priority 3.3 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 3.3 “Regulate Algorithms” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Result for 2024 Implementor – Read more about 'Priority 3.3 Actions'

Priority 3.1 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 3.1 “Data Control” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Result for 2024 Implementor – Read more about 'Priority 3.1 Actions'

Priority 3.2 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 3.2 “High-Quality Identity System” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Result for 2024 Implementor Read more about 'Priority 3.2 Actions'

Priority 4.3 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 4.3 “Strengthen the Government’s ICT organisations and systems” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Read more about 'Priority 4.3 Actions'

Priority 4.2 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 4.2 “Improve Data Management for Citizens and Organisations” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Read more about 'Priority 4.2 Actions'

Priority 4.1 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 4.1 “Improve Information Management for Open Government” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Result Read more about 'Priority 4.1 Actions'

Priority 5.2 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 5.2 “Working Together on the Digital Society Within the Kingdom” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and Read more about 'Priority 5.2 Actions'

Priority 5.1 Actions

In the following table, you will find a description of priority 5.1 “Achieving Digital Maturity in the Dutch Caribbean” with the desired results for 2024 and the organisations responsible for implementation: Results and implementors Description Read more about 'Priority 5.1 Actions'

5.2 Working Together on the Digital Society Within the Kingdom

Social challenges In addition to the Netherlands, digitalisation is also changing society in Aruba, Curaçao and St Maarten. The Dutch Caribbean countries want to better utilise the advantages that digitalisation offers and respond to the Read more about '5.2 Working Together on the Digital Society Within the Kingdom'

5.1 Achieving Digital Maturity in the Dutch Caribbean

Social challenges Citizens, businesses and government organisations in the Dutch Caribbean must be able to use digitalisation to its full potential. Government services are currently poorly integrated and mostly offline, and little information is exchanged Read more about '5.1 Achieving Digital Maturity in the Dutch Caribbean'

4.3 Strengthen the Government’s ICT Organisation and Systems

Social challenges ICT is essential to a modern central government’s capacity to act. This places demands on technology, people and organisation. Government plans must be financially and digitally substantiated and embedded with transparent costs and Read more about '4.3 Strengthen the Government’s ICT Organisation and Systems'

4.2 Improve Data Management for Citizens and Organisations

Social challenges The use of data by the government can offer numerous opportunities, but it can also create distrust. To maintain trust, data must always be collected, stored, and processed in accordance with the law. Read more about '4.2 Improve Data Management for Citizens and Organisations'

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Last modified on: 27 February 2025.

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