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Home » Digital Government is a Critical Infrastructure Need for the Digital Economy

Digital Government is a Critical Infrastructure Need for the Digital Economy

| By: Nonye Ujam, Director, Government Affairs, Microsoft West Africa

Techeconomy by Techeconomy
May 4, 2026
in Guest Writer
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Nonye Ujam Microsoft

Nonye Ujam | Microsoft

The digital economy offers Africa a once‑in‑a‑generation opportunity to accelerate progress against key development priorities and unlock long‑term prosperity.

It is central to the continent’s future, serving as the most powerful engine to drive inclusive growth, create jobs, and enhance global competitiveness in this era.

It expands access to opportunity beyond geography for Africa’s population, improves productivity across sectors, strengthens public service delivery, and enables countries to leapfrog legacy constraints rather than replicate them.

In effect, the digital economy is no longer a standalone sector, it is the foundation upon which Africa’s economic resilience, regional integration, and sustained prosperity will be built.

However, fully realising these gains depends not only on private-sector innovation, but critically on the effectiveness and efficiency of the public systems that underpin economic activity.

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The analog bottleneck in a digital economy

Across Africa, core economic and administrative processes, from business registration and tax administration to land transactions and licensing, are mediated through government systems.

Yet in many countries, these systems remain manual, paper-based, or only partially digitised, with new technologies layered onto legacy workflows that have not fundamentally evolved.

The result is that digitisation, absent deeper institutional reform, risks reinforcing the very inefficiencies it seeks to resolve.

Fragmented platforms, inconsistent data standards, and limited interoperability across agencies introduce friction across the economy, slowing business activity, increasing transaction costs, and undermining trust in public institutions.

This underscores a central reality: digital government is fundamentally a governance challenge, not a technology one. Progress depends on strong institutional capacity, anchored in change management, cybersecurity, sound platform architecture, and sustained public sector ownership.

Where this foundation is constrained, digital programmes often produce ineffective outcomes: systems misaligned with current realities, dependency on fragmented solutions, and platforms that fail to endure beyond initial implementation.

Unlocking potential through digitization

Nigeria has demonstrated strong potential to emerge as a leading digital economy on the continent, underpinned by over 154 million internet users and a dynamic innovation ecosystem.

It has been reported that Artificial Intelligence alone is projected to deliver up to $136 billion in productivity gains across four major African markets by 2030, with Nigeria accounting for approximately 43 percent of this value.

This trajectory is reinforced by a resilient startup ecosystem that continues to attract significant capital, securing $410 million in 2024, representing 18.6 percent of Africa’s total funding, and exceeding $555 million in 2025, most significantly in fintech and digital service delivery.

Sustaining this momentum depends on the strength of public‑sector infrastructure. Nigeria has taken a decisive step forward with the introduction of the National Digital Economy and E‑Governance Bill, 2024, establishing the foundation for a more coherent and future‑ready digital ecosystem.

This legislation seeks to establish a unified legal and institutional framework for digital transformation, institutionalisation of electronic administrative processes, enhanced interoperability across government institutions, while establishing a secure foundation for public-sector data governance.

By embedding digital‑first operations into public administration, these reforms position government as an enabler of economic activity, reducing friction, strengthening transparency, and creating a more efficient, investment‑ready environment in which businesses can innovate and scale.

Global best practice demonstrates possibility

International experience shows that well‑governed public sector digitisation delivers measurable economic and institutional gains.

Estonia offers a leading example, having transformed public administration through the end‑to‑end digitalisation and automation of core government processes.

By building an integrated digital infrastructure, Estonia has created a more responsive public sector, improved citizen satisfaction, and strengthened trust in state institutions.

Today, the country saves an estimated 2 percent of GDP annually through digital signatures and streamlined public services, while integrating artificial intelligence to further enhance service delivery and operational efficiency.

India has similarly developed one of the world’s most advanced digital public infrastructures. The country’s information technology sector already contributes approximately 13 percent to the GDP, with projections for the digital economy reaching 20 percent by 2030. Through its Digital Public Infrastructure and India AI Mission, the country is scaling innovation by providing affordable AI compute capacity to entrepreneurs, researchers, and businesses at significantly reduced costs.

These examples underscore a clear lesson: digital public infrastructure must be built as a platform for long‑term transformation.

Success depends on sustained investment in people, institutions, and governance frameworks, not just technology systems.

This ensures that digitisation simplifies the relationship between citizens and the state rather than replicating legacy inefficiencies in digital form.

Public-Private partnerships enable the shift to e‑governance

The E‑Governance Bill establishes the policy foundation for a digitally enabled Nigeria, underpinned by execution partnerships that bring together technology, capability and global best practice.

Microsoft is advancing this transition through targeted investments in skills and building institutional capacity.

Initiatives such as Digital Skills Nigeria, the 3MTT programme, and strategic engagements with the Ministry for Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, the National Information Technology Development Agency and the Nigeria Data Protection Commission, have been instrumental to the success of reaching over 6 million Nigerians with critical digital and AI skills and certifying over 150k to date.

Beyond skills, Microsoft is advancing the adoption of secure, scalable cloud infrastructure and interoperable digital platforms that underpin next-generation e-government systems. Through Microsoft Azure and its suite of AI-powered services, governments and startups are enabled to unlock the full value of data, driving more agile, inclusive, and citizen-centric public service delivery.

This is complemented by enterprise-grade security capabilities and a principled approach to Responsible AI, grounded in transparency, accountability, and governance frameworks that help build trust, strengthen resilience, and support the long-term sustainability of digital public services.

Ultimately, public sector digitisation is not a technology challenge alone; it is a leadership, governance and capability imperative enabled by technology.

Embedding digital‑first principles across public administration reduces economic friction, expands inclusion and positions Nigeria as a regional leader in Africa’s digital transformation journey.

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