The initiative
The challenge
The public impact
Stakeholder engagement
The stakeholders of e-Governance are:
- The Ministry of Finance (MoF) – the owner of eGov2015, which provides the funding for e-government programmes and projects.
- The Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) of Singapore – the Government Chief Information Officer (CIO).
- The Chief Information Officers (CIOs) of government agencies.
There is a strong engagement on the part of all stakeholders. While the MoF sets the policy, the IDA provides technical advice and recommendations, and planning and project management services to the MoF and government agencies in the implementation and management of e-government programmes. Agency CIOs who are responsible for agency-specific ICT infrastructure services within their own organisations.
However, there was a noticeable lack of external stakeholders to provide an alternative perspective to eGov 2015.
Political commitment
Public confidence
The eGov2015 Masterplan was launched after the success of the previous e-government initiative (eGov2010). The results of the 2010 e-Government Customer Perception Survey indicate that the initiative was very popular with the general public:
- “87% of the people are satisfied with the quality of government’s e-services.
- “93% of the people will recommend others to transact with the government through e-services.” [3]
Clarity of objectives
Strength of evidence
The eGOV2015 Masterplan was launched after the success of eGov2010 and previous initiatives, on which it proposed to build. Its view was that its continuing digitisation efforts had made Singapore a pioneer in e-government development and innovation and provided sufficient evidence to support its 2011 initiative.
These previous initiatives spanned a period of over 30 years from the Civil Service Computerisation Programme in the 1980s to the e-Government Action Plan I and Action Plan II between 2000 and 2006 to the iGov2010 Masterplan from 2006 to 2010.
Since it was a continuation of digital government practices, a pilot programme was not considered to be necessary. The government identified three major trends that shaped the masterplan:
- Global advances in ICT, particularly in mobile technologies.
- A better educated and more informed populace. Therefore it has been rated good.
- The trend towards open data and open government.
Management
The government CIO and assistant chief executive of IDA, Chan Cheow Hoe, was the champion of eGov2015 and provided experience of IT management and leading organisations through transformational change. [4]
Every government agency also has agency CIOs who are responsible for agency-specific ICT assist Ministry permanent secretaries and CEOs of statutory boards in order to:
- Articulate the organisation’s ICT vision in the exploitation of ICT.
- Provide leadership in the planning and prioritisation of IT initiatives, in line with eGov2015.
- Ensure management attention, manpower and monetary resources are directed to ICT initiatives.
Measurement
The outcomes of the programme are measured via a limited range of parameters – including the number of services accessible online (over 1,600) and the number of mobile services provided by the government (over 300) – and the approval ratings in customer satisfaction surveys.
However, there is no information on whether the measurement functions resulted in adaptations to eGov2015.
Alignment
All the stakeholder were aligned towards the same objectives, as outlined above in Stakeholder Engagement. For example, the creation of a nationwide Electronic Health Record (EHR) system was seen as an initiative in line with the government’s eGov2015.
In addition, as all the initiatives are intended for the benefit of the public, the government launched various tools like the REACH and eCitizen portals. It also developed an open data platform (data.gov.sg) – an online portal which consolidates over 6,000 government datasets into a single online catalogue to help citizens locate government data and feed back their views on public policies to the relevant government agencies.
Resources
2011, Singapore eGov
The Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) website
(egovmonitor.com), August 31, 2011
www.mof.gov.sg
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