Businesses have relied on standards for decades, squeezing out costs by increasing efficiency and maximizing product consistency and quality.

Regulators can do the same by adopting open-source data standards and identifiers for data collection. Standards grease the wheels of agency data collection and cut government spending. They improve accessibility, uniformity, and usefulness of data for the public, and facilitate the use of advanced technologies like artificial intelligence. 

Manufacturing companies maximize efficiencies and minimize costs by using the same standard size containers across products and companies. Regardless of content, the dimensions of standardized containers like cans and bottles are the same. Standards maximize efficiency and reduce cost on the filling line, in the supermarket, and in the shipping process when products are transported by truck. A small change in container structure would mean a massive increase in cost.

Open data standards wring unnecessary costs out of government data collection and increase the quality and functionality of reported information. Regulatory efforts including the FDTA for financial and municipal bond issuance reporting, and the GREAT Act for grants reporting aim to increase government efficiency through data standardization. The increasing availability of open, freely available data in structured, standardized format leads to significantly greater support for financial technology including AI.

The latest news, events and posts


Why the release of the Meta Model Relationships Taxonomy matters
Point of View posted November 19, 2024

By Campbell Pryde, President and CEO, XBRL US The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) released the proposed 2025 version of the Meta Model Relationships Taxonomy (Meta Model Taxonomy) for public review with comments...

govDATAx, Data to Results: Mapping the Future of Effective Government
Event on October 30, 2024
Details

Attend the XBRL International Conference that brings together standards setters, regulators, policy makers, analysts, tech experts, accounting professionals, and other innovators from across the reporting community to share insights into the future of...




How to Improve the FDTA Rule –
Response from XBRL US

Point of View posted October 11, 2024

By Campbell Pryde, President and CEO, XBRL US The cost of government regulation is increasingly seen as a burden by many in Congress and the courts who look to limit the scope of...

XBRL US Presents Digital Reporting for Measurable Results: Climate, Corporate, Government, Washington DC
News posted August 29, 2024

XBRL US is pleased to announce, Digital Reporting for Measurable Results: Climate, Corporate, Government, a one-day conference to be held in Washington, DC, November 14, 2024. The program will address the expanding demand...




Muni Bond Markets Weigh in on FDTA at GovFin 2024
Point of View posted August 13, 2024

This year’s GovFin 2024 took a deep dive into municipal reporting aspects of the FDTA. The program featured speakers with an in-depth understanding and experience in various aspects of the municipal markets and...

Data Amplified 2024
Event on November 21, 2024
Details

Attend the XBRL International Conference that brings together standards setters, regulators, policy makers, analysts, tech experts, accounting professionals, and other innovators from across the reporting community to share insights into the future of...



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