GovLoop

Uncle Sam Needs Better IT

This interview is part of a new DorobekINSIDER mini series with experts looking to help shape a management platform for the new administration. Check out all of the stories in the new series, Good Government Management, here.

Unfortunately, the United States is no longer the top innovator in the world. In fact, according to a recent report, Contributors and Detractors: Ranking Countries’ Impact on Global Innovation, put out by the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, the United States only ranks 10th overall. The report pointed out that the ranking stemmed from “policies that do little to detract from global innovation yet fall short of those of other nations when it comes to contributing to global innovation.” In lieu of this shortcoming, a team of Tech Iconoclasts has come together to bring the U.S. back on top.

Alan Balutis, Senior Director and Distinguished Fellow of the U.S. Public Sector for Cisco, sat down with Christopher Dorobek on the DorobekINSIDER program to discuss the push for better IT policies in the next administration.

“There is no democratic or republican way to invest in information technology,” Balutis said. But, there are better ways in which the next administration should invest in information technology.

The Tech Iconoclasts will not stand for the status quo around the U.S’ current IT stance and, therefore, have voiced their opinions in the form of a paper titled Tech Iconoclasts-Voting For America’s Success in a Network World. Here are some of the topic areas the report covered:

Balutis hopes to hear how the current presidential candidates will “improve both the efficiency and the effectiveness of the hundred plus billion that we spend each year on information technology and how they plan to use IT to transform the way we deliver services, such as healthcare, transportation, and education in the United States.”

To read a previous blog post about the necessity for the next president to embrace IT, please click here.

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