PM charts online future to cut red tape, boost growth

In a landmark address at The University of the West Indies, Prime Minister Andrew Holness unveiled Jamaica’s ambitious strategy to digitize virtually all government services, positioning technological transformation as the cornerstone of national economic survival. Speaking at the ‘Beyond Bureaucracy: Jamaica’s Resilience for the Digital Age’ forum organized by Generation 2000, the ruling party’s young professionals wing, Holness delivered a compelling critique of systemic inefficiencies that have hampered Jamaica’s global competitiveness.

The Prime Minister reframed efficiency as a fundamental national resource rather than merely a bureaucratic byproduct. “For smaller developing states like Jamaica, efficiency isn’t a consequence of growth—it’s the essential driver,” Holness asserted. “We cannot compete on size or scale, but we must compete on speed, clarity, and efficiency. It’s a travesty that we produce the world’s fastest humans yet rank among the slowest in business innovation, approval processes, and execution.”

Holness highlighted the fundamental disconnect between bureaucratic systems and citizen experiences: “For officers enforcing rules, delay carries no cost—they get paid regardless. But for citizens, delay has real financial consequences. This is Jamaica’s central challenge: creating smart bureaucracy.”

The government has already initiated practical reforms, including eliminating in-person vehicle registration renewals and annual fitness recertifications. “Why must registration be an in-person transaction?” Holness questioned. “Technology enables online processing that saves tremendous time.”

Despite hundreds of digitized services, adoption remains limited due to accessibility gaps and cultural resistance. “Not everyone has reliable internet access,” Holness acknowledged, “and some citizens prefer physical cash and paper documentation.”

The administration is addressing these barriers through infrastructure investments and tackling identity verification complexities that fuel bureaucratic redundancy. “Repeated identity checks at every government interaction create frustration and corruption opportunities,” Holness noted, emphasizing the need for secure digital identification systems.

Rather than eliminating bureaucracy entirely, the government seeks its transformation. “A world without bureaucracy would be chaos—blatant corruption, negligence, and vanished standards,” Holness clarified. “We propose modernization that eliminates corruption possibilities while maintaining governance order.”

Pointing to Singapore and South Korea as successful models, Holness stressed how these nations “invested heavily in digitalizing their economies and public administration while ensuring government served industry” rather than debating “conspiracy theory nonsense.”

The digital transformation initiative represents Jamaica’s comprehensive effort to modernize public sector operations, enhance business facilitation processes, and position the nation competitively within the technology-driven global economy. Holness concluded that technology integration into governance systems is critical for improving service delivery and securing Jamaica’s long-term economic prospects.