The response to COVID-19 started a Tsunami of innovation that could change the future of development

Q&A with Titon Mitra, UNDP Resident Representative in the Philippines

May 1, 2020

COVID-19, for all its deleterious effects, has provided the impetus to assemble real-time, global interaction and collaboration, that can be agile and responsive to the information and analytical needs of governments trying to chart a way forward. Manila, Philippines. Photo by Luca Bucken on Unsplash

How has COVID-19 made you rethink the future of development?

In a matter of months, over 2 million people have been infected, hundreds of thousands have died, health systems have been overwhelmed, economies decimated and the social fabric of many countries stretched to the point of tearing apart.  Without question this is first and foremost a health crisis. Its cascading and potentially scarring effects on economies and societal systems can be mitigated if quickly and effectively dealt with.  But it is also a crisis of opportunity.  That crisis of opportunity is whether we will choose just to progressively build back better to be resilient to future crises, or fundamentally alter the nature and trajectory of a nation’s development?  It’s a crisis because we have an immediate and far reaching decision to make: do we fall back into an old and comfortable development paradigm of long, linear and familiar change or adopt more revolutionary change?

COVID-19 is showing us that revolutionary change is possible.  This crisis response is arguably the most digitally enabled in history.  We are seeing an outbreak of digital solutions to support disease surveillance, to provide information to citizenry, to enable teleworking, to facilitate on-line collaboration and learning, to make social safety net payments at immense scale, and to even manufacture medical equipment with 3D printing.  Lockdowns have taken vehicles off the streets, allowed people to work from home and at the same time care for families, and given people a glimpse of mountains and blue skies they have never been able to see through persistent smog.  Some leaders are talking more enthusiastically about planetary health and social wellbeing as an equal, if not greater measure of national success, than GDP.  COVID is leading to unprecedented speed and global collaboration in vaccine and antibody development.  Within the span of the last 90 days, nearly 1,700 economic policy announcements on COVID-19 have been made by governments and institutions to ameliorate the worst of the impacts.  The development process can now potentially be put on steroids to shift us from a slow pace of change, to rapid acceleration towards a dramatically different, equitable and sustainable world.

How can the Philippines (and possibly the world) achieve that ambitious result?

The easy answer to this would be to say, simply ride the wave of change, and capitalize on the Tsunami of innovation we are now experiencing.  The technology is here or rapidly being developed and the sheer magnitude of the crisis is providing the impetus for reflection across society on the future we need.  Financial resources are being made available in volumes that dwarf the response to the Global Financial crisis of 2007-08.  While the possibilities and resources are there, choices have to be made.  This takes leadership and it takes quality and accessible data to inform decision making.  Perhaps like no time before we are seeing experimentation at scale and speed.  But what works?  What are the opportunity costs?  What are the differentiated impacts across income groups, the marginalized, the vulnerable, and across different geographic areas? Where do you invest your financial resources – knowing that each dollar spent will have to be repaid by future generations - to obtain the highest returns measured by planetary health and social wellbeing as much as growth in GDP?  Certainly in the Philippines, and likely in most developing countries, existing approaches for monitoring impact and efficacy are at best piecemeal and certainly not at the scale and granularity required to enable well-informed systematic change. It does not have to be this way.  There is an immense amount of administrative and high-frequency data available that can be used. There are also honed methods for scraping this data and mature frameworks for structuring it in meaningful ways. We need to converge these frameworks, data streams, data standards, to make better sense and guide an effective response and shape our desired future. UNDP will work with the Government of the Philippines and the private sector to make public and private sector data readily accessible and useable to inform the COVID-19 response.

What can we do as UNDP to help countries make it happen, in very concrete ways?

UNDP has immense convening power borne from a long history of impartial and inclusive action.  It is remarkably well placed to facilitate data collaboration amongst partners that may not easily work alongside each other.  UNDP can rapidly bring together governments, private industry, social media platforms, non-profits, our sister UN agencies, data scientists and research organizations to share data, access the required computing power, including artificial intelligence and machine learning, and align research and analysis.   Its vast network of Accelerator Labs – with the aspiration of being the largest and fastest learning network in the world - can provide the means to map and share globally, rapidly evolving solutions, help countries contextualize these and take them to scale. COVID, for all its deleterious effects, has provided the impetus to assemble real-time, global interaction and collaboration, that can be agile and responsive to the information and analytical needs of governments trying to chart a way forward.

What one lesson or experience do you wish to share related to the above? 

Here in the Philippines we are about to launch the Pintig Lab (‘Heartbeat’ in Filipino), designed to constantly take the Nation’s pulse and measure its socio-economic health in response to the Government’s COVID-19 amelioration program.  Pintig is a collaborative endeavor between UNDP, the Department of Information and Communications Technology, the private sector, academe and think tanks, to ingest, synthesize, visualize, and analyze, with the aid of Artificial Intelligence and predictive software, a wide array of high frequency data, administrative data, app based, on-line enabled, and household level surveys and translate these into real time policy and program advice for Government. Pintig will not only inform the crisis response but provide the platform for managing future crises and development programs.  If there is indeed a ‘COVID Dividend’ it is perhaps the spirit of collaboration and desire to change at pace that we are seeing in the Philippines today.