Gulf Today

Pandemic fast forwards digital revolution in Greece

- Lefteris Papadimas and Renee Maltezou, Reuters

Before COVID-19, visits to Greece’s paperstrew­n labour offices were an ordeal of queues and case files, oten for basic maters that in less than a year have moved online as the pandemic upended old administra­tive routines.

“Essentiall­y overnight, two thirds of the visits were no longer necessary,” said Spiros Protopsalt­is, head of OAED, the Organizati­on of Employment and Unemployme­nt Insurance.

Crammed with thousands of folders and blue OAED registrati­on cards spilling out onto desks and floor space, the corridors of the building where he spoke still offer a daunting vision of the challenge to overhaulin­g public services in Greece.

But conservati­ve Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis says he is determined to harness the pandemic to “leapfrog” other countries with green and digital reforms to change everything from energy to education.

Greece has long been an online laggard, languishin­g at the botom of the European Union’s digital economy rankings, but shits forced by the pandemic and billions of euros from the

EU’S Recovery Fund may accelerate change.

Around 6 billion euros ($7.34 billion), a fith of the 32 billion in EU recovery funds that Greece will receive, has been earmarked for the transition. Some 400 projects, from fibre optic networks to reinforcin­g cybersecur­ity and improving skills have been outined in a 2020-25 “Digital Transforma­tion Bible”.

“If we can do everything we’ve planned in the recovery, it will be truly transforma­tional,” Mitsotakis told Reuters in an interview. Similar promises of transforma­tion have been heard before however and years of encrusted bureaucrac­y as well as a debt crisis that decimated investment will not be swept away easily.

According to a 2019 OECD report, two thirds of Greeks believe they deserve beter treatment from state services, which for many, mean dispiritin­g visits to rundown offices where case files can disappear for years.

Public offices only stopped using fax machines at the start of this year; high speed internet connection is not a given and ancient box-sized computers running on 1990s sotware are common. “We still use pens to write,” said

Dimitris, a public sector manager planning to retire ater 44 years, who did not want to give his last name in case it complicate­d the batle he faces to claim his pension.

“There are certain prerequisi­tes for Greece to leapfrog as it needs, because right now it lags behind in most metrics,” said Nikos Vetas, head of the Foundation for Economic and Industrial Research (IOBE) thinktank.

Pressure to shake up public services had grown as successive government­s batled through the decade-long debt crisis and eye-catching initiative­s, such as a unified e-government services plaform, have followed. “Even before the pandemic, 80% of our services were digital,” said George Pitsilis, head of the Independen­t Authority for Public Revenue who says he wants to eliminate any reason to come to a tax office.

“Of course the pandemic was an accelerato­r,” he said from one of the authority’s modernized Athens offices where video calls have largely replaced in-person visits.

In other areas, progress has been slower. For many pensioners, claiming retirement benefits involves long sessions with an official using paper and a calculator to work out how successive reforms — there were at least 13 during the financial crisis— have affected their entitlemen­ts.

Many claims are delayed for years and a target to get 80% of the system online this year appears ambitious. “Geting a pension in Greece is a nightmare,” sighed Dimitris, the retiring public servant.

But other signs are more hopeful. The government points to investment plans from the likes of Microsot and Amazon and, although many older people do not use a computer, smartphone Features like an e-prescripti­on service launched as the pandemic erupted have proved a hit.

From 1,500 people registered when it opened, there are now around 1.6 million users and nearly a quarter of drug prescripti­ons are issued online.

“The good thing with digital transforma­tion is you don’t necessaril­y need lots of physical capital,” said Vetas. “You need human capital and in that regard one can be optimistic Greece can transform.”

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