egov 75: leaders speak
Miles to Go for e-Governance The power of media, marketing and advertisement should be duly utilised to increase visibility and outreach of e-Governance projects
A Ritobaan Roy
Technical Expert, MSME Finance and Development Umbrella Programme, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)
ll is not as well as it seems with the National e-Governance Plan (NeGP). Various NeGP projects are still under implementation and have progressed very slowly from the year of implementation. State governments are implementing their own e-Governance projects for certain departments but the status too is dismal in certain cases. The reasons are many for this condition but mostly it is lack of IT penetration and capacity building among the stakeholders. There are large remote pockets where technology has not seeped in and even where it has proper training is not there to use it efficiently. The coming years though could see more adoption of broadband in urban areas; rural areas however still would be a challenge. Given the special status of NeGP, one expected faster implementation. Longer the time to ‘go live’, more difficult is it to contain skepticism about expected benefits from eGovernance. There could also be resistance to continued funding of such projects if legislators do not see visible progress. If we are to expect radical changes in the pace of implementation in the coming years we should follow some strict measures like giving more consideration to mobile technology and shifting towards m-Governance as most users irrespective of the rural or urban category will access internet on their phones. A dedicated government task force at operational level that can go from location to location and act as project manager on the government side should be made for all the projects for e-Governance. Certain prominent projects should be selected and deemed ‘critical’ and should go live by December 2012. These projects should also be under a Ring-fence corpus so that they are unaffected by changes in government or budget reviews. Also, the power or media, marketing and advertisement is undermined when it comes to government projects. There are several good schemes up and running about which a major section of the beneficiaries are not aware. Thus, for each of the major projects there should a big launch with proper media promotion which will not only increase its visibility but also enlarge its reach. From
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“An examination of different areas where ICT impacts the overall framework for governance shows a clear trend towards a more international and a more market-based type of governance” – Morten Falch, Centre for TeleInformation, Technical University of Denmark January 2005
June 2011 / www.egovonline.net / egov
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