Whatever they do, it's going to be a very slow process. And some of those commissions (maybe even most) don't have tech people in them...
Granted, economists - which they do have - are very useful to get how the whole thing is working, but I think someone from those institutions has to be able to look under the hood and understand what's going on at some point.
Plus, so far, tech experts are not correctly incentivised in the public sector : why would they work cheaply for dinosaurs when they can sell their skills at a high price to promising Fintech startups ?