Big, Open Data for Development: A Vision for India
Sam Asher (),
Aditi Bhowmick (),
Alison Campion (),
Tobias Lunt () and
Paul Novosad ()
Additional contact information
Aditi Bhowmick: Development Data Lab
Alison Campion: Development Data Lab
Tobias Lunt: Development Data Lab
Paul Novosad: Dartmouth College
India Policy Forum, 2022, vol. 18, issue 1, 1-52
Abstract:
The government generates terabytes of data directly and incidentally in the operation of public programs. For intrinsic and instrumental reasons, these data should be made open to the public. Intrinsically, a right to government data is implicit in the right to information. Instrumentally, open government data will improve policy, increase accountability, empower citizens, create new opportunities for private firms, and lead to development and economic growth. A series of case studies demonstrates these benefits in a range of other contexts. We next examine how government can maximize social benefit from government data. This entails opening administrative data as far upstream in the data pipeline as possible. Most administrative data can be minimally aggregated to protect privacy, while providing data with high geographic granularity. We assess the status quo of the Government of India’s data production and dissemination pipeline, and find that the greatest weakness lies in the last mile: making government data accessible to the public. This means more than posting it online; we describe a set of principles for lowering the access and use costs close to zero. Finally, we examine the use of government data to guide policy in the COVID-19 pandemic. Civil society played a key role in aggregating, disseminating, and analyzing government data, providing analysis that
Keywords: Open Data; Governance; India; Economic Growth; Public Goods Provision (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C8 I15 I25 O1 R11 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)
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