The Baltic nation of Estonia only has 1.3 million citizens stands out from its
Eastern European neighbors in that it has an advanced economy and a high
standard of living. And it’s a technology paradise. You may know it as
the home of Skype. But there’s a lot more to the tiny country than that.
In Estonia, voting, signing documents and filling out tax returns is done online, thanks to X-Road,
an online tool that coordinates multiple online data repositories and
document registries. X-Road provides all Estonians — ordinary citizens,
enterprises and government officials — with unparalleled access to the
data they need to do business, get licenses, permits and other documents
that would take days, weeks or even months in other countries.
X-Road is built with scalability in mind, so that the growing number
of services and repositories can easily be attached to the system.
Although this digital backbone alone is rather impressive, it’s just one
of many products in tech-forward Estonia.
Instead
of being held back by its past and falling victim to ailments that
plague many post-communist countries, such as corruption, a bloated
government and an obsolete education system, Estonia has decided to
start with a clean slate and invest in its future. To transform its
society into a community of tech-savvy individuals, children as young as 7 are taught the principles and basics of coding. (In comparison, only one in four schools in the U.S. teaches computer programming.)
Such
strong foundations have yielded impressive results: Estonians are
driven, forward-thinking and entrepreneurial, and the same goes for the
government. It takes only five minutes to register a company there and,
according to The Economist, the country in 2013 held the world record for the number of startups per person.
And it’s not quantity over quality: Many Estonian startups are now
successful companies that you may recognize, such as Skype,
Transferwise, Pipedrive, Cloutex, Click & Grow, GrabCAD, Erply,
Fortumo, Lingvist and others. By the way, Estonia uses the euro.
If
all this sounds enticing and you wish to become an entrepreneur there,
you’re in luck; starting a business in Estonia is easy, and you can do
it without packing your bags, thanks to its e-residency service, a
transnational digital identity available to anyone. An e-resident can
not only establish a company in Estonia through the Internet, but they
can also have access to other online services that have been available
to Estonians for over a decade. This includes e-banking and remote money
transfers, declaring Estonian taxes online, digitally signing and
verifying contracts and documents, and much more.
E-residents are issued a smart ID card, a legal equivalent to
handwritten signatures and face-to-face identification in Estonia and
worldwide. The cards themselves are protected by 2048-bit encryption,
and the signature/ID functionality is provided by two security
certificates stored on the card’s microchip.
But great innovations don’t stop there. Blockchain, the principle behind bitcoin that also secures the integrity of e-residency data, will be used to provide unparalleled safety to 1 million Estonian health records.
The blockchain will be used to register any and all changes, illicit or
otherwise, done to the health records, protecting their authenticity
and effectively eliminating any abuse of the data therein.
While
there are many lessons that the U.S. and the rest of the world can
learn from Estonia, these are especially important: A country must be
willing to adapt and change the infrastructure of both the government
and the economy if needed, and to continually optimize them. A nation
needs to understand that a change of mindset should be thorough and
start with the young. An education system should be designed in a way
that doesn’t cripple young minds, or overburden them with too much
irrelevant information. And, finally, if you want entrepreneurship to
thrive, it is necessary to remove bureaucratic and technical obstacles
at all levels.
How close is your country to Estonia in technology? Let me know in the comment section below.
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