Government compliance is at a tipping point. The wave of pandemic-related social programs has triggered an increase in noncompliance and strained the public purse. At the same time, the acceleration of digital is creating new ways for social services and tax agencies to engage with citizens and businesses. While most people want to comply, it’s hard to when processes and systems are complex and are not designed for modern life.
Designing simple, personal and digital compliance experiences is an opportunity for people to comply—maximizing revenue and providing vital services. It’s an opportunity for government to build trust and innovate now for the future.
Experiences for people
The more “human” they are, the more they can change behaviors. The simpler they are, the more compliant citizens and businesses will be.
Clear communications
Human error usually causes noncompliance. Communication can help people understand benefits, obligations, tax distribution and guidelines.
Connecting into the ecosystem
Agencies can connect and share data with banks, software companies and other agencies to simplify processes and improve the compliance.
Digital infrastructure
Building a strong infrastructure means creating a cross-government digital identity, national payments and e-invoicing standards.
Action against non-compliance
Agencies experience a surge in fraud. Workflow, technology, and analytics can fight fraudsters defending the vulnerable and provide benefits.
Our lead
Rainer Binder
Managing Director – Health & Public Service, Social Services and Workforce & Talent Transformation
Improve time-to-market with scalable identity and access management, data governance and more.
Advance your mission
Making a difference in citizens’ lives requires not just setting a bold vision but executing pragmatically and efficiently against it. Our deep industry expertise drives end-to-end, proven solutions to help your organization evolve.
Cloud and digital platforms
Accelerating digital transformation for innovation, resilience and, growth.