Exclusive: Italy’s mission to simplify government
Interview with Diego Piacentini, Digital Commissioner for the Italian Government.

Payments progress
Second, his unit wants to improve payments like taxation and traffic fines. Italy has a national payments system - PagoPA - which was originally built for administrative processes. Piacentini’s team is regearing this to work for citizen transactions.
Piacentini’s team redesigned the system and started to get citizens onboard. “We worked on making the user interface incrementally better,” he says. They made it mobile friendly and opened up the APIs so that it would interact with other payment systems.
The system has been deployed in Milan to help citizens pay their garbage taxes in the city. “Obviously there was some criticism, because any technology projects will have some bugs in the beginning, but the payment transaction volumes were 42% higher than the previous year.” This success is attracting other agencies and municipalities to test it out.
Digital Identity
Third, his team is spearheading a new digital identity system, SPID. This gives citizens a single log-in that can be used across the public sector, and they will also be able to use it for bank and insurance services.
SPID is a federated system. This means that a series of approved private sector suppliers can give citizens identities,rather than the state building a single system. Government instead sets criteria for identity verification and security.
“You can imagine how much easier things get,” Piacentini says. Citizens won’t have to fill in applications anymore because the government will have their information, he points out. The system will also sync up with EU plans to share digital identity data across the European Union, allowing a citizen to work and travel seamlessly across the 27-country bloc.
How they work
Piacentini’s approach is simple: find agencies that want to make a change, and use them to showcase the value of digital. “You want to work with municipalities and administrations that really want it. You don’t want to spend time convincing someone. That’s our principle. ”
[blockquote]"You don't want to spend time convincing someone"[/blockquote]
The Digital Transformation Team looks for easy wins, such as the PagoPA system, which was already built but was languishing unused. As you would expect in the land of Zonda and Zegna, good design matters, so they are redesigning systems to bring users on board. Of course, Piacentini reports directly to the Prime Minister, so he does have a hefty amount of influence to bear if needs be.
The objective is to procure as much from Italian startups as possible. “There should be enough competence within government to design the architecture and have the product in mind, but then have the market code and write the products,” he says.
Entire departments in Italy’s government do not have a CTO, he notes, outsourcing all of their services to external vendors. “Some departments are totally locked-in”. He wants to ensure that there is greater capability to procure services and understand the design of digital systems.
To do this, Piacentini hired a crack team from tech companies across the world. He has around 25 people who took sabbaticals from Google in Mountain View, California; Rocket in Berlin; UBS in Zurich and plenty of startup types taking a short term break to serve their nation.
“If you come to people like me and say: ‘Hey, would you like to work for the government for the rest of your life?’ The answer is probably ‘no’,” Piacentini says. But when asked to work for two years, with a salary cut, many engineers will say yes so that they can give back to their nation, he says.
Piacentini has another year to go before he heads back to Amazon. He is optimistic about what he can achieve, and is hoping to fundamentally change how government approaches tech projects.
Leaders should say: “Here are the tools to do it, this is the budget,” Piacentini believes. “You shouldn’t say: this is how it is supposed to be built, but that was the way it was."
“That’s the way it is with many things in Italy,” he adds. But not anymore.