Connecting the Dots: Making Digital Government a Reality in Indonesia
Oleh: Teguh Anantawikrama, Founder and Chairman of the Indonesian Tourism Investor Club and Vice Chairman of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce
Kredit Foto: Ist
After reviewing the proposed collaboration between the Ministry of Administrative and Bureaucratic Reform (PANRB) and the Directorate General of Population and Civil Registration (Dukcapil), I believe this initiative is far more than a request for system integration or access to population data. It represents the beginning of Indonesia’s National Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), with Portal Nasional INAku serving as the citizen-facing gateway to integrated government services.
The most important message from this initiative is that Indonesia is shifting from building individual government applications toward creating one integrated digital ecosystem centered on citizens. Instead of each ministry developing its own digital platform, INAku is designed as an orchestration layer that connects existing systems while allowing every ministry and institution to maintain ownership of its own data, business processes, and statutory authority. This is the right architecture for a modern digital government.
The proposal also establishes Dukcapil as Indonesia’s national trust layer. Through Digital Identity (IKD), biometric verification, and secure identity services, every citizen can access government services using a trusted digital identity. This identity layer becomes the foundation upon which future public services, digital transactions, and even AI-powered government services can securely operate.
Equally important is the adoption of the Life Event approach. Rather than requiring citizens to visit multiple government agencies, services should revolve around important events in people’s lives. Birth registration is the ideal starting point because a single birth triggers numerous government services, including civil registration, healthcare, immunization, nutrition programs, social assistance, and education. Citizens should experience one seamless government rather than multiple disconnected institutions.
The inclusion of the Once Only Principle is perhaps the most transformative aspect of the proposal. Citizens should provide their information only once. Verified data should then be securely reused across government services where legally permitted. This not only simplifies public services but also improves data quality, reduces fraud, eliminates duplication, and significantly enhances the citizen experience.
However, technology alone will not deliver digital government. Success depends on governance. Interoperability standards, cybersecurity, data governance, legal frameworks, audit mechanisms, and institutional collaboration must be established before large-scale implementation. Digital transformation is fundamentally a governance transformation supported by technology.
What Should Be Done Next?
To truly connect all the dots and make Digital Government a reality, Indonesia should move beyond individual integration projects and execute a coordinated national strategy.
First, establish a permanent national Digital Government governance body that aligns PANRB, Komdigi, Bappenas, Dukcapil, and all ministries under a common enterprise architecture, interoperability standards, cybersecurity framework, and implementation roadmap.
Second, complete the Digital Public Infrastructure by integrating its three essential building blocks:
- Digital Identity through Dukcapil and IKD.
- Secure data exchange and interoperability using common APIs and standards.
- A citizen-centric service platform through Portal Nasional INAku.
Together, these become the foundation upon which every future digital public service can be built.
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Editor: Fajar Sulaiman
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