Industry Spotlight | September 25, 2024

AI agents power the public sector  

 

Government agencies often struggle with a myriad of repetitive and time-consuming tasks, mountains of data that need to be managed, and inefficient processes that can drain resources and hinder productivity. 

Meanwhile, citizens are often looking for more transparency from governments about the work they do; a more efficient way of engaging; and easier ways to access public services without getting lost in a maze of online forms, processes and confusing websites. 

 


 

Autonomous decision-making is here to help 

 

The good news is that AI can be a powerful force in helping government organizations make decisions, improve services and get work done. And we’re starting to see examples of how AI agents, in particular, are being used by governments to analyze vast datasets at incredible speeds, provide public sector bodies with insights they can put to work immediately, automate hundreds of processes, and enhance the services offered to citizens.

What we see coming next are multi-agent systems composed of multiple interacting intelligent agents, and a new approach called Agentic AI where systems will be able to augment human work further by understanding and interpreting complex information and goals and then take actions based on continuous learning and analyses of extensive datasets.

 

The Agentic AI approach is particularly well suited to addressing the needs of public sector organizations in the following three ways:

 

1. Improved efficiency 

 

Think of an AI multi-agent system as your team of expert co-workers, available 24x7, with the knowledge you need to collaborate on complex tasks.

Decisions are made in the context of specific use cases. Patterns and trends that traditional methods may have missed are identified, and complex workflows are adjusted in real-time as circumstances evolve. This allows human workers to focus on higher-value tasks, representing a significant shift towards augmenting workers with intelligence tailored to their roles.

Agentic AI can improve efficiency for public sector workers in these ways:

  • Knowledge retrieval agent: Retrieves relevant information from a data source of tax regulations, policies and procedures to provide real-time answers to agents' queries.  

  • Sentiment analysis agent: Monitors the tone and sentiment of the caller in real time, alerting the human agent if the caller is becoming frustrated or upset, and suggesting appropriate responses to de-escalate the situation.  

  • Follow-up agent: Schedules and manages follow-up actions, such as sending emails or scheduling callbacks, ensuring that no task is overlooked.


Simplifying the tax process in Brussels

Identifying the most suitable business process opportunities is a critical starting point. And DXC’s work with the Brussels Tax Department is a great example of how AI agents can help simplify the entire tax administration process.

This was in response to a desire to address increased citizen demands; streamline administrative work; and remove backlogs of work to free up capacity to introduce new services and improve citizen experiences.

“DXC combined AI and industry expertise with a thorough understanding of our current IT landscape,” said Dirk De Smedt, Director General of Brussels Fiscaliteit. "The discovery session gave a kick-start to build our AI roadmap."


As part of our work with the Brussels Tax Department team, the DXC team is exploring options for improving first-time call resolution through real-time coaching, formulating personalized responses to citizen queries, and consolidating data across multiple systems to reduce call times.  

Agentic AI is well suited for this purpose, with specialized AI agents collaborating toward a common goal.



2. Improved government outcomes

 

With careful implementation, the multi-agent approach has the potential to deliver transformative outcomes that go beyond improvements in efficiency and engagement methods to include:   

  • Faster decision making:  Examples include determining eligibility for grants, allowances, or support services and potentially for tax breaks.  

  • Improved data interpretation: Agents can be used to improve fraud detection, resulting in increased revenues to spend on public services, among other examples. 

  • Data-driven insights: Agentic AI can process and analyze large volumes of data to provide actionable insights for policymakers and service providers. This can lead to more informed decisions and a better allocation of resources. 

     

3. Better citizen experiences 

 

Beyond the ability to increase capacity, Agentic AI has the potential to improve experiences offered to citizens in multiple ways:   

  • Personalization: Agentic AI can gather and analyze individual citizen data to provide personalized recommendations for services or benefits, ensuring that citizens receive the information most relevant to them.  

  • Customized communications: AI can adapt communication styles and language based on citizen preferences, making interactions more user-friendly and accessible.  

  • Early intervention: AI can identify patterns that indicate potential issues for citizens (e.g., financial distress, health risks) and alert relevant authorities to intervene early.  

  • Improved access to services: By simplifying interfaces and providing contextual understanding, Agentic AI opens the door to improving access and use of the data sources available across multiple government departments. 

 

Unlocking a treasure trove of cultural data in Italy

Sifting through decades of bibliographic information can be laborious and time-consuming for researchers, academics, students and others. That was the challenge the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage wanted to solve for users of its portal Alphabetica, which connects millions of records and digital materials from over 6,500 libraries in Italy’s National Library Service.

 

DXC built an AI agent called Alphy that simplified Alphabetica’s user interface and allowed for a natural language exchange between users. This led to more substantive responses and opened a treasure trove of cultural data to the general public.  

A single agent is currently used in the portal. The team envisions this could be expanded to a series of specialized agents tailored to personas with different needs. More specialized agents might be used to overlay geospatial data, provide bibliographical information and convert text to speech.



What makes DXC different?

 

DXC's consulting and engineering experts can help public and private organizations get started on their AI initiatives by:  

  • Assessing an organization’s readiness to start exploring AI use cases   

  • Conducting a consultative workshop to explore potential use cases   

  • Providing services for AI use case design, implementation and operation  

DXC is currently developing a multi-agent framework for assessing, designing, deploying and improving multi-agent AI, which can be applied to almost any government process.




 

The big picture

DXC helps public sector organizations around the world operate as seamlessly, efficiently and cost-effectively as possible.

Our team of experts, who currently serve nearly 300 public sector departments and agencies, are skilled at engineering complex integrated systems and delivering dependable operational services including running workloads in any environment and keeping data safe wherever it's located. This is essential for public organizations looking to adopt AI solutions in a way that citizens can trust. 




Authors

Karim Jeribi, Vice President and Industry Leader, DXC Global Public Sector, Aerospace & Defense

Matt Kay, Offering Director, DXC Global Public Sector, Aerospace & Defense