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E-government - organizational and democratic challenges. Åke Grönlund Örebro University, Sweden <ake.gronlund@esi.oru.se>. All on the web, but little change.
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E-government - organizational and democratic challenges Åke Grönlund Örebro University, Sweden <ake.gronlund@esi.oru.se>
All on the web, but little change • eGovernment studies consistently report a lack of the much hoped-for efficiency gains by reorganization and cross-organizational integration, particularly at local level. • “While 467 local councils in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have web sites 23 – 5 % - have 'transactional' services” (Society of Information Technology Management) – and little progress
Why? 9 Swedish government agencies – local, regional and national – regarding their view of drivers and obstacles 4 hypotheses: • lack of economic incentives • No sense of crisis • Lack of user “e-readiness” • Conflicting goals
Swedish eGov agenda 10 yrs • 1995: “Top Leaders’ Forum” • 1997: Gov Bill “Public Administration at the Service of the Citizens” • 1999/2000 Gov Bill ”An Information Society for all”, a close match to the EU initiative ”eEurope” • 2001/02 Gov Bill “Democracy for the New Millennium” • Swedish Agency for Public Management (SAPM): developing standards for IT and information transfer and initiating, supporting and monitoring progress among government agencies
As of the bills…. In the information society: • ”People will change” • ”Ways of doing business will change” • ”Education will change” • ”Companies will change” • But never: ”Government will change”
Practitioners views • Which are the driving forces for developing e-services? • What is the knowledge about, and the view on, the national policy documents in the field? • What e-services have been implemented? • What are the visions for the future? • What is the influence of companies on the development of public e-services? • How are e-services developed? • What organized cross-organizational cooperation is there, and how do the actors view the needs in this respect? • What are the main obstacles for further development?
Validity • Typical views among leading government practitioners • Organizations together cover 20 % of the Swedish population • 2nd largest city • 2nd largest region • 2 of the largest national government agencies. • 6 of the smallest towns • 1 rural region. • Views founded in long history of IT development and eGov efforts
(H1) Lack of economic incentives SAPM: • Investment comes first – payback comes… when? One-year budget strongly guiding the behaviour • Benefits to one agency may require investment in another • Unclear how to share development costs that benefit more agencies • Some investments are too large for individual agencies to bear -> national support or cooperation is necessary • Investments yielding societal benefits, bring small or no agency benefit, and cannot be financed by fees are not made
Lack of economic incentives? (1) • Automated voice service saves 88 % of the cost per call • Economic incentives are designed on a per-agency basis and do not favor cross-border cooperation • A strict one-year planning horizon • Low level of competence in measuring effects of e-service use in local government • Defensive attitude • Lack of political leadership • Require national directives, e g signatures • National work division? • Municipal law forbids municipalities to sell innovations
Lack of economic incentives ? (2) • “Good e-services trigger demands for better services and this might eat up efficiency gains” • Whole systems factors, e g reorganization, are not rewarded: Costs and benefits unbalanced • Many mention positive effects of citizen demand creating a pressure for reorganization, only one of the municipalities in our investigation has systematically worked for implementation of this • Lack of technical and semantic standards • Political decisions at national level regarding cooperation and standards are lacking • e-services not yet integrated part of daily business operations
(H2) There is no sense of crisis requiring eGov investment in the agencies where it is supposed to be implemented • Case studies and anecdotal evidence (e g Kawalek et al, 2003) supported by evidence from other fields
No sense of crisis? • e-Gov not politically driven - delegated to lower level adm, often IT dept -> reorganization not an issue • “Better service” – non-urgent issues quoted as drivers • Crises usually seen as budget deficits and lack of staff -> eGov not seen as a solution • Little look to research -> eGov seen as simple implementation • Often a special organization for dealing with e-services but on top of the ordinary business not as change driver
(H3) Service users and providers lacking skills and means to make use of the electronic medium EU agenda: • Broadband connectivity • User “trust” • Education • % of people online…varies across countries
Users not ready? • Citizen trust in government and e-services high • “e-service supply is too limited, citizens want more” • No major problems with using services • e-services providing user value much used • “the coming IT-generations are expected to demand more e-services” • New channels such as SMS considered attractive • Some services have not yet found their place/lack of general services • Government’s lack of care for privacy aspects make users hesistant
(H4) Local gov’s have conflicting goals, and other ones are sometimes prioritised over investing in eGov to improve government efficiency • Local employment -> why scrap public sector jobs for achieving a more efficient public sector if the whole municipality would then suffer from increased unemployment? • Problem cutting manual services -> risk that e-services would only increase costs
Conflicting goals, other priorities? (1) • Internal driving forces mentioned include providing better services, utilizing resources better, and attracting staff by being a more modern organization. These factors can to considerable degree be dealt with within each organization and are treated in this way • Cross-border cooperation is only rarely happening, and several respondents require the national government to make some services compulsory or provide incentives • Unclear how services provided correspond to citizen needs, as structured investigations of needs/requirements are not made • Noone wants to make a risky investment, national policy later making local services obsolete -> turf war stage?
Conflicting goals, other priorities (2) • Defensive rationalization for to meet budget constraints -> not strength left for (proactive) reorganization • eGov issues delegated -> eGov not considered in a restructuring perspective -> eGov competing cost • No tradition of cooperation, among municipalities and between municipalities and companies • Cooperation seen as threat to local innovation, adaptation to local conditions, and – for small municipalities– local independence • Public sector lacks procedures and experience in commercializing innovations
Conclusions + Lack of economic incentives + No sense of crisis eGov can solve - User “e-readiness” + Conflicting goals
Discussion • The “lack of readiness”, implying steady if slow progress towards a politically defined goal should be challenged • Balancing central – local. The role of local governments at stake • Uncertainty of national policy implementation -> -> turf wars • Elements of standardization both at technical level and service level lacking • “Market model” has not driven reorganization across borders -> System level incentives?
…. • The long list of drivers and inhibitors indicate that eGovernment development is complex and involves a number of challenges. There is no one straight-forward way towards the electronic government, and what is positive at one stage may prove an obstacle at the next • eGov can not be treated just as a way to achieve internal organizational efficiency – “external” issues regarding societal organization are at stake. The automating stage is well underway, now comes the governance stage
eGov as evolutionary system • Administrative engineering • Consultations, e-lobbying, voluntary org’s • ”e-democracy”: often information focus • ”user” e-dem: administrators in charge • E-service ”do-it-yourself”, community networking • eGov: formalization to implement policy
Reorganization – for what? • Most ignored eGov issue: The e-citizen: what is she like, and how does she relate to the electronic government? • From eDemocracy to participation? The emancipated eServiceCitizen? • The role of municipalities? • Less of service providers, more of community? • More of service providers leaving community to civil society organizations?
Current EU: Information Interaction (download forms) 2-way interaction (form processing, authentication) Transactions (case handling, decision, delivery, payment) Future? Information/catalogue Two-way communication Service and financial transactions Vertical and horizontal integration Political (citizen) participation (Moon, 2002; Abramson&Means, 2001) Benchmarking for change