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eGovernance strategic framework for the next five years

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Title: eGovernance strategic framework for the next five years


1
eGovernance strategic framework for the next five
years
Jeremy Millard, Danish Technological Institute
2
Government / eGovernment ?
  • Alan Mather (UK eEnvoy)
  • eGovernment isnt any different from
    government. It just might make it better,
    sooner.
  • Major policy goals of government / eGovernment
  • 1 The search for savings dynamic,
    productivity-driven and value for money concept
    and set of institutions (more for less)
  • user as tax-payer
  • 2 The search for quality services inter-active,
    user-centred, individualisable, inclusive
    services, maximising fulfilment and security
  • user as consumer
  • 3 The search for good governance open,
    transparent, accountable, flexible, democratic
  • user as citizen and voter
  • What is role of the e in achieving above ?

3
European eGovernment roll-out (1)
4
European eGovernment roll-out (2)
5
European eGovernment demand side
Preferred way of interacting with government
(Source Sibis, 2003)
6
European eGovernment status Supply side
  • Roll out dominated by services provided by single
    centralised administration, especially those
    which generate income for government (income and
    company tax, customs, VAT, procurement)
  • easiest to implement, top-down, revenue
    generating, pre-existing functioning institution
    (or cooperating set of institutions)
  • Less well represented by services provided by
    decentralised and multiple local agencies
  • more variegated, complex, small scale, greater
    risks (politically, financially), fewer
    incentives
  • Barriers interoperability issues between
    agencies, technology and organisational
    incompatibility, security, regulation, culture,
    legality, etc.

7
European eGovernment status Demand side
  • Highest demand for local and regional services,
    which are
  • simple, high quality (achieve fulfilment), and
    involve input of little personal information
    (e.g. library, job search, house moving, car
    registration)
  • Need for multiple channel access
  • both electronic (web, digital TV, PIAPs, mobile,
    as well as PC) and traditional face-to-face/teleph
    one/post
  • Barriers complex services, too much personal
    data required and lack of trust (security, data
    protection), channel access, awareness, no
    interest, etc.

8
European eGovernment status Conclusion
  • There has been a supply-side push over last 2-3
    years (success of eEurope 2002), but resulting in
    significant mis-match between supply and demand
    which now needs addressing -- focus on
    user-friendly, personalisable, high quality
    services at appropriate levels and multi-channel
    (from local to cross border), including CRM and
    high security
  • However, some good evidence of cost savings --
    despite initially high investment, are starting
    to see lower running costs, fewer staff, higher
    productivity, lower fees, greater satisfaction
    (e.g. eProcurement)
  • Also evidence of greater outreach, availability,
    transparency, better support for business, better
    compliance with national and international rules
  • But, these achievements have tended to leave
    established structures and processes largely in
    place -- the learning curve can be long and
    difficult.

9
Major strategic areas in eGovernment
  • Efficient and lean government
  • Government process re-engineering
  • Meeting user needs and expectations
  • Leadership, managing change and human resources
  • Technology X
  • Cultural and socio-economic drivers of change
  • Service delivery
  • Access for all
  • Institutional and legal structures X
  • eGovernance and eDemocracy X

10
Efficient and lean government
  • Driver since mid 1990s to achieve significant
    cost savings through eGovernment but has not
    materialised on significant scale
  • In 21st C the realisation is that cost savings
    (plus significant quality improvements) will only
    come from re-engineering the internal processes
    of government
  • but this can be seen as euphemism for sacking
    public sector workers and degrading the ethos of
    government and public service
  • Some savings are now being made by eGovernment
  • often require substantial investment, especially
    as the eChannel typically has to run alongside
    the traditional channel
  • but can give quick returns though most will be
    longer term, e.g. fewer staff in directly
    affected departments
  • need better budgeting and cost benefit analysis
  • savings led by eProcurement but other service
    areas as well

11
GPR (1) -- internal
Traditional government
12
GPR (2) -- internal
Front-office re-engineering
13
GPR (3) -- internal
Back-office re-engineering
14
GPR (4) -- internal
Total re-engineering
15
GPR (5) -- between back-offices / agencies
Vertical integration
  • Between government levels
  • international
  • national/federal
  • regional
  • local
  • community
  • e.g.integration of single government functions
    like admin, health, education, etc.

Both vertical and horizontal integration
tailored and joined-up government for --
citizens e.g. life events -- business e.g.
discrete activities -- targeted at specific user
groups
Horizontal integration
Between different government departments or
agencies, including with non-government actors,
such as the private sectors (in PPPs) and the
third sector such as NGOs. e.g. integration of
multiple government functions in one place or
between places at same level (cross border)
Traditional, compartmentalised, bureaucratic
government
16
  • Meeting user needs and expectations
  • Service design
  • user focus and stakeholder involvement
  • user-friendly features
  • multi-channel access and services
  • User support
  • help-desk and user training
  • direct user feedback
  • Marketing and take-up
  • marketing and publicity
  • incentives and maximising take-up
  • use of multipliers and intermediaries

17
Leadership, managing change and human resources
  • Management and decision-making
  • change management and decision-making
  • corporate commitment
  • tools and teamwork
  • The locus of pressure for change
  • from users and staff
  • from business
  • from the responsible agency
  • Public-private partnerships
  • Phased implementation approach think big, start
    small, scale fast
  • Human resources
  • fewer staff
  • changing roles and skills of staff
  • staff flexibility
  • staff training

18
Models of eGovernance are cultural rather than
technical
19
Service delivery and access for all
  • Complementarity of different delivery channels
  • Citizen and business life events or target
    groups
  • Principal of access and affordability for all
  • Social and economic divides now being compounded
    by digital divide??

20
Moving forward...
  • There needs to be a transformation of government
    to prioritise the production and distribution of
    public goods (content) rather than public
    administration (control), with a re-vitalised
    public service ethic and high skill, high value
    staff
  • Down-sizing and centralisation of the back office
    (control), even up to national and international
    levels
  • open technical platforms, interoperability,
    standardisation, comprehensive security systems,
    integrated processes, shared databases, economies
    of scale and scope, based on KM principles, CRM
    -- middle office, shared service centres
  • Up-sizing and de-centralisation of the front
    office (content) to provide high quality, simple,
    localised, personalised, services
  • grounded in local situations, responding to the
    large variety of individual needs of both users
    and government, and respecting and promoting
    democracy at all levels -- the subsidiarity
    principle writ large
  • (R)e-balancing -- freeing up and redeploying
    resources a smaller and smarter back office and
    bigger and better front office
  • The Back Office/Front Office dichotomy is a
    metaphor for control versus content
  • In future, this dichotomy will become redundant
    and the content will be in control
    governance will have outgrown bureaucracy

21
On-going strategies
  • Focus on what citizens and business really need /
    demand, rather than the machinations of existing
    government structures and systems
  • Focus on using new technology as a tool to
    support services and governance, i.e. enable
    people to do what they do best (e.g. provide
    warm human services implicit knowledge) and
    enable technology to do what it does best (e.g.
    provide effective and efficient data, information
    and communication systems explicit or codified
    knowledge)
  • Develop and re-vitalise the existing European
    public service ethic into one suitable for the
    information society and knowledge economy. This
    would include recognising that government can
    learn from business, and vice versa, but that
    there is a unique European way to e-government
    which combines both economic efficiency as well
    as social cohesion and access for all.
  • What we think of as e-government today will
    become (just) government within ten years i.e.
    all of government will use and become e.
  • In the same way that e-business is migrating to
    k-business, so e-government will migrate to
    k-government in the sense that the technology
    will become unremarkably ubiquitous (the norm)
    and intelligent services will be provided by
    intelligent government
  • Develop me-government, i.e. personalised,
    intelligent government, based on knowledge
    management, artificial intelligence and
    ubiquitous, ambient technology. Anytime,
    anywhere, any service, on the users own terms.

22
Governance transitions
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