Senior Program Officer, Research and Measurement, Digital Public Infrastructure

Tags: finance English Environment
  • Added Date: Sunday, 11 May 2025
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The Foundation

We are the largest nonprofit fighting poverty, disease, and inequity around the world. Founded on a simple premise: people everywhere, regardless of identity or circumstances, should have the chance to live healthy, productive lives. We believe our employees should reflect the rich diversity of the global populations we aim to serve. We provide an exceptional benefits package to employees and their families which include comprehensive medical, dental, and vision coverage with no premiums, generous paid time off, paid family leave, foundation-paid retirement contribution, regional holidays, and opportunities to engage in several employee communities. As a workplace, weโ€™re committed to creating an environment for you to thrive both personally and professionally.

The TeamDivision Summary: Global Growth and Opportunity
The Foundation partners with people and organizations worldwide, through grant making, to tackle critical problems across various program areas and divisions. Our Global Growth & Opportunity (GGO) Division focuses on creating and scaling market-based innovations to stimulate inclusive and sustainable economic growth. GGO focuses on the areas of Agricultural Development, Global Education, Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), Inclusive Financial Systems (IFS), Nutrition, and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WSH). We believe that people are poor because markets do not work for them, and we promote innovative products and policies that can break down barriers to economic opportunity, help people lift themselves out of poverty, and deliver sustainable and inclusive growth that benefits everyone.

The Team: Digital Public Infrastructure
Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) is a set of digital systems that enables countries to safely and efficiently provide economic opportunities and deliver social services. DPI spans the entire economy, connecting people, data, and money in much the same way that roads and railways connect people and goods. Countries that build safe and inclusive DPI can create a vibrant and competitive economy, foster trust between governments and citizens, and deliver essential services and create economic opportunity across many sectorsโ€”including finance, health, and agriculture. Safe and inclusive DPI can ultimately help advance progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals and ensure that everyone can prosper, especially women and people with the lowest incomes.

The foundation is focusing its initial DPI efforts on supporting countries in building the three core elements of DPI:
โ€ข Digital identity systems, which enable the creation, management, and authentication of unique identities for use in digital scenarios.
โ€ข Digital payment systems, which enable governments, businesses, and individuals to instantly send and receive money, regardless of who hosts the underlying accounts.
โ€ข Data exchange systems, which enable individuals, organizations, and governments to safely share digital information.
The foundationโ€™s digital payments work is overseen by our Inclusive Financial Systems team, while the DPI manages our work on digital identity and data exchange.

The DPI team also aims to explore several emerging DPI components, including:
โ€ข Consent, which involves a privacy-based mechanism for users to authorize the exchange of their digital information
โ€ข Credentials, which enable the sharing of government-issued and privately issued credentials, such as certificates, invoices, driverโ€™s licenses, and passports
โ€ข Registries, to establish verifiable records of what people own, claim, or are entitled to
โ€ข Digital signatures, which are created, verified, and managed to ensure the legal validity of electronic documents and transactions.

By establishing open, standardized, and interoperable systems for performing these functions, DPI can enable more inclusive economic participation, more effective delivery of public services, and more open and competitive digital economies.

Your Role

In order to design, build, and regulate safe and inclusive DPI, policymakers, regulators, and commercial providers must adopt evidence-based interventions. The Senior Program Officer will identify areas where rigorous data and research can support the design, implementation, regulation, and adoption of safe and inclusive DPI and increase the welfare impacts of these technologies. You will develop and execute research and measurement strategies to fill these data and evidence gaps.

This role is based in our offices in Seattle, WA, where employees work a hybrid schedule. Domestic or international relocation is available for work-authorized candidates who need to move to Seattle, WA to start in this role.

Application deadline - Noon, Pacific Time Monday, May 26, 2025.


What You'll Do

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