Technology & Innovation

Technology and the urban citizen

March 20, 2012

Global

March 20, 2012

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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The immense popularity of smartphone apps has not only helped to create better interaction between businesses and their customers, but also between cities and their citizens. One example comes from the UK capital, London, with the launch in 2011 of a “Love Clean London” app, which the mayor, Boris Johnson, hopes will help to clean up the city’s streets and parks. Residents can snap a photo of an offending item of litter, graffiti or vandalism; the app files it and records the exact location.

The benefits of this are twofold: it makes it easier for citizens to become engaged, while at the same time cutting costs for local councils. Since it was launched by the local council for a south London borough, Lewisham, the council’s spending on street-cleaning has been held at 2003-04 levels, complaints have fallen by 30% and there has been an 87% improvement in the time it takes to respond. “It is enabling quicker feedback about problems on the street, which improves our ability to respond,” explains Bill Limond, CIO of the City of London. It also creates greater transparency about work that is under way, with the service giving live statistics about the number of reports filed and how many complaints have already been addressed.

Looking ahead, Mr Limond sees cloud computing, social networking and mobile technology as all playing an important role in city-level government. “A large number of our citizens will be expecting to get information fast and on the move, and we must be able to cater for these demands,” he says. Related to this will be increasing access to civic data and information, making government more transparent and giving people greater awareness of services, such as updates on the status of public transport. All this will be good news for citizens, but it may well be even more important for city administrations themselves: streamlining and automating processes, and facilitating greater selfservice, will all be crucial means of coping with the tough budgetary pressures ahead.

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