Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme

Purpose The paper aims to provide a benchmark study of the European Union (EU) e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme. The main objective of the European strategy for the development of e‐government was that the member states should ensure “online public services”. To monitor this policy...

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Published in:Aslib Proceedings
Main Author: Wauters, Patrick
Other Authors: Gunter, Barrie
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Emerald 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/00012530610692348
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spelling cremerald:10.1108/00012530610692348 2024-06-09T07:47:14+00:00 Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme Wauters, Patrick Gunter, Barrie 2006 http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/00012530610692348 http://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/full-xml/10.1108/00012530610692348 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/00012530610692348/full/xml https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/00012530610692348/full/html en eng Emerald https://www.emerald.com/insight/site-policies Aslib Proceedings volume 58, issue 5, page 389-403 ISSN 0001-253X journal-article 2006 cremerald https://doi.org/10.1108/00012530610692348 2024-05-15T13:20:44Z Purpose The paper aims to provide a benchmark study of the European Union (EU) e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme. The main objective of the European strategy for the development of e‐government was that the member states should ensure “online public services”. To monitor this policy the European Commission defined two indicators. Design/methodology/approach The European Commission developed a list of 20 basic public services. The Commission and Capgemini defined a framework to evaluate the online availability of each of the services in each of the EU member states, plus Norway, Iceland and Switzerland. Findings The study finds that since 2001 a considerable improvement in online public service provision was measured, even so the 2004 result of 65 per cent online sophistication of public service delivery in the EU still shows an important gap with the 100 per cent objective, the result was considered a positive. When considering the different types of public services, income generating services including income tax, VAT and corporate tax are by far the most developed online. The new member countries seem to be only two years behind in the development of online public service. The most advanced countries exceed 80 per cent but seem to evolve to a “plateau”. They have developed their most feasible services, demanding less effort, now only the “hard” ones are undeveloped, mostly services delivered at a decentralised level. Research limitations/implications The study provides information on the online development of public services, i.e. the provision and interactivity of public services through the internet. It does not analyse the provision of services through other channels, neither the quality of the service delivery, nor the use or impact of these new ways of public service supply. Therefore a new EU e‐government measurement system must change the focus from “availability” of e‐government services, to “use” and desired positive “impact” of e‐government programmes. Originality/value This study ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Emerald Norway Aslib Proceedings 58 5 389 403
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description Purpose The paper aims to provide a benchmark study of the European Union (EU) e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme. The main objective of the European strategy for the development of e‐government was that the member states should ensure “online public services”. To monitor this policy the European Commission defined two indicators. Design/methodology/approach The European Commission developed a list of 20 basic public services. The Commission and Capgemini defined a framework to evaluate the online availability of each of the services in each of the EU member states, plus Norway, Iceland and Switzerland. Findings The study finds that since 2001 a considerable improvement in online public service provision was measured, even so the 2004 result of 65 per cent online sophistication of public service delivery in the EU still shows an important gap with the 100 per cent objective, the result was considered a positive. When considering the different types of public services, income generating services including income tax, VAT and corporate tax are by far the most developed online. The new member countries seem to be only two years behind in the development of online public service. The most advanced countries exceed 80 per cent but seem to evolve to a “plateau”. They have developed their most feasible services, demanding less effort, now only the “hard” ones are undeveloped, mostly services delivered at a decentralised level. Research limitations/implications The study provides information on the online development of public services, i.e. the provision and interactivity of public services through the internet. It does not analyse the provision of services through other channels, neither the quality of the service delivery, nor the use or impact of these new ways of public service supply. Therefore a new EU e‐government measurement system must change the focus from “availability” of e‐government services, to “use” and desired positive “impact” of e‐government programmes. Originality/value This study ...
author2 Gunter, Barrie
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wauters, Patrick
spellingShingle Wauters, Patrick
Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme
author_facet Wauters, Patrick
author_sort Wauters, Patrick
title Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme
title_short Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme
title_full Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme
title_fullStr Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme
title_full_unstemmed Benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐Europe programme
title_sort benchmarking e‐government policy within the e‐europe programme
publisher Emerald
publishDate 2006
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/00012530610692348
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volume 58, issue 5, page 389-403
ISSN 0001-253X
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