The goal being the principle that people should not have to repeatedly submit data, when operating in one of the countries, which they have already filed in the other. Thus, for instance, entrepreneurs will no longer have to prove, in both states, the absence of tax arrears; also, those desiring to officially work in Finland will no longer have to submit, every year, the paper copy of pension insurance certificate there.

«We will also be looking for overlapping services in other areas,» assured Siim Sikkut, information and communications technology adviser at strategic bureau of Government Office. Mr Sikkut added that, in the future, medicine might be purchased in Finland with Estonian digital prescriptions. In the same way, people’s health data might travel between doctors across the bay.

Sharing and joint development of X-Road solution is prescribed by cooperation memorandum, signed yesterday by Estonian and Finnish prime ministers. To our knowledge, this was the first international agreement in the world which was signed digitally. By that time, the ID-card standard software’s new version was completed, enabling to sign documents by the Finnish ID-card.

According to PM Andrus Ansip, the digital way of doing things has, in Estonia, become so common that one would not imagine running from one institution to another, paper documents in hand. According to him, this has helped save time by a working week in a year, equalling two percent of GDP.

Even though the single-data-submitting principle has been decided for the entire EU, Mr Ansip said Estonia, as well as Finland, are the pioneers of the field.

As Estonian-Finnish cooperation gains traction, it is hoped that the X-Road model will attract interest in the rest of the Baltic Sea region, and thereafter elsewhere in Europe. Among other things, this might, in turn, open up new business opportunities for IT-companies from both Estonia and Finland.