Summary - How might artificial intelligence affect the trustworthiness of public service delivery?

The first Long-term Insights Briefing explores how the APS could integrate artificial intelligence (AI) into public service delivery in the future, and how this might affect the trustworthiness of public service delivery. In developing the briefing, we heard that the community expects the APS to adopt and use AI solutions in ways that demonstrate integrity, competence and empathy for people, and deliver a clear improvement in the performance of public services. This briefing offers insights into how the APS can ensure that AI contributes to the delivery of high quality and trustworthy public services in the future.

What is a Long Term Insights Briefing?

An opportunity for the APS to consider significant, cross-cutting and complex policy issues, and how they may affect Australia and the Australian community in the medium and long term.

What did the Pilot LTIB do?

Explored how the APS could integrate AI into public service delivery in the future, and how this might affect the trustworthiness of public service delivery.

The briefing used community and expert engagement, research and futures thinking to explore how AI could transform public service delivery and the potential impacts of these changes on trustworthiness of service delivery agencies.

We will need to innovate to meet community expectations of public services in the future, including by adopting AI

The Australian community expects a higher standard of care, tailored and personalised services, and greater convenience and efficiency when accessing services.

Australia’s population is ageing, increasing demand for care and support services.

A transition from informal to formal care is increasing demand for a higher standard of care.

Climate-related events like natural disasters will cause peaks in demand for resources, while reducing resources available to fund other public services.

Opportunities to improve public service outcomes include:

  • AI-driven automation can increase efficiency
  • Healthcare advancements
  • Enhanced decision making
  • Improved customer experience
  • More efficient resource management

Using AI is not risk free:

  • AI can inherit biases present in training data
  • Privacy concerns from use of personal data
  • Unintended consequences
  • Dependency and reliability
  • Inaccuracies
  • Job displacement

Community views on AI and public service delivery

  • 57% zero or slight knowledge of AI
  • 63% zero or slight understanding of when AI is being used

People who know more about AI have higher trust in government’s ability to use AI for public service delivery.

Trust in government to responsibly use AI for ‘faster processes or service delivery times’

Percentage of people who trust and strongly trust with: Zero AI knowledge: 12%; Slight AI knowledge: 37%; Moderate AI knowledge: 54%; Good AI knowledge: 70%; Complete AI knowledge: 71%

Source: Australian Public Service Commission, Survey of Trust in Australian Democracy (forthcoming)

What did we learn?

Insight #1: AI must be designed and implemented with integrity

This means that people and organisations employing AI are accountable for AI outcomes and transparent about how AI is being used, practise ethical values and principles when designing, developing and implementing AI, and ensure personal privacy and data security.

AI regulation and frameworks will only build trustworthiness if they are clearly communicated and explained to the community.

Insight #2: Using AI shouldn’t come at the expense of empathy

When the public service demonstrates empathy for the people it serves, this builds trustworthiness.

In practice, this means providing enough of a relationship – human interaction – with public services. What that looks like depends on an agency’s trust history, the community it serves, and the type of service it offers.

Insight #3: AI should improve performance

If using AI perpetuates unintentional biases and stereotypes, or makes it harder for people to access and engage with public services, trustworthiness will be eroded.

New skills and capabilities will be needed to adopt and use AI in ways that improve public services. This includes upskilling frontline staff to be able to explain the output of AI systems to others in a clear and understandable way.

Insight #4: Successful service delivery depends on supporting people to engage with AI-enabled services in the long term

Public services must be available for everyone, including those who don’t want to engage with digital and AI-enabled systems or provide additional personal data. In the long term, we will live in a more connected world, and the APS will need to steward the community through the transformations that AI will bring.

It will be important to invest in building the AI literacy and digital connectivity of the community.