DEAT Study: Taiwan’s Six Cities Enter a Split Era in Digital Policy
Original: DEAT《六都數位政策調查研究》出爐:城市發展邁入分化時代,數位平台成補位關鍵
DEAT and NCCU report that Taiwan’s six major cities are diverging in digital governance despite similar infrastructure progress.
DEAT and National Chengchi University’s Department of Public Administration released their first localized survey on digital policy across Taiwan’s six special municipalities. The study says basic infrastructure is becoming more similar across cities, but gaps remain in digital governance capacity and policy execution. It frames digital platforms as important partners that can help fill public-data gaps and support more evidence-based city decision-making.
DEAT, together with National Chengchi University’s Department of Public Administration, has released what the article describes as the first localized “Six Municipalities Digital Policy Survey Research” focused on Taiwan’s six special municipalities. The central finding is that urban development has entered a period of differentiation: the cities are no longer separated mainly by whether they have basic digital infrastructure, because that foundation is becoming more similar. Instead, the meaningful gap is shifting toward digital governance, including how well cities use data, platforms, and institutional capacity to make public decisions.
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