Title: DIGITAL ERA GOVERNANCE
1DIGITAL ERA GOVERNANCE
Presentation to GOVIS 2005
2EDS Corporation
Who are we ?
- EDS Corporation is the leading global IT
outsourcing services company with 120,000
employees in 60 countries. Based in Plano, Texas
- Created by one-time US presidential contender
Ross Perot in the 1960s to run the computer
systems of US Govt departments, multi-national
banks and commercial organisations - Revenue exceeds US20 billion. Listed on NYSE
and London Stock Exchanges. Ranked 95th in
Fortune 500
3EDS New Zealand
- EDS NZ services the biggest govt depts and banks,
and NZs two biggest companies Telecom and
Fonterra
- Processes 1 million beneficiary payments a
fortnight, handles interbank overnight
interchange and settlement, collaborative
cheque-processing, biggest print/mail outlet in
NZ - Created more than 200 jobs in two years handling
work for offshore clients
- Market leader in IT outsourcing and services,
more than 2300 staff in 8 cities
4Major New Zealand Clients
Banking and Finance
Central Government
Other Industries
- ANZ National Bank Ltd
- Bank of New Zealand
- Westpac
- ASB Bank
- Interchange and Settlement Ltd
- Ministry of Social Development
- Inland Revenue Department
- Land Information New Zealand
- Department of Labour Workforce
- NZ Police
- Ministry of Justice
- Telecom
- Fonterra
- Auckland Regional Council
- Auckland District Health Board
Local Government
5Viewpoint
- EDS has been working with London School of
Economics, KSG Harvard and Carnegie Mellon
- Professor Patrick Dunleavy
- Professor Mark Moore
- This talk is based on the findings of their
research as well as experiential evidence from
EDSs involvement with government globally
- AIM To promote debate
6Scope
- The Prevailing Management Philosophy
- New Public Management (NPM) / New Management
Strategy
- Digital Era Governance (DEG)
- E-government
- E-democracy
- The Transformational Potential of ICT
- Barriers to Adoption
- The NPM/DEG Paradox
7- PUBLIC MANAGEMENT PHILOSOPHY
8Definition of NPM
- Hands on professional management
- Explicit standards and measures of performance
- Output controls
- Decentralisation Agencification (Separation of
the policy implementation function from
policy-making function)
- Competition
- Private sector style management practices
- Parsimony in resource use
- Disaggregation
- Competition
- Incentivisation
- Dunleavy (2004)
Hood, Christopher, A Public Management for all
Seasons? Public Administration, Vol 69, pp.
3-19, Spring 1991
9New Public Management (NPM) New Management
Strategy (NMS)
- Literature on NPM is vast and varied
- USA Bill Clinton Reinventing Government
- Japan PM Hashimoto (1997)
- UK Thatcher/Heseltine spearhead
- New Zealand Market-based reforms (1984)
- plus Australia, Canada, India, Jamaica and
Thailand
- Germany elements
Foster, C D and Plowden, F J (1996) The State
Under Stress (Buckingham Open University Press)
Dunleavy, P. (2004). NPM is Dead - Long Live
Digital-Era Governance. London School of
Economics and Political Science.
10The NMS/NPM Movement
- NEW MANAGEMENT STRATEGY. In the UK the Next
Steps agencification programme once expected to
include five-sixths of the central civil service
in fact stabilised at somewhat over half the
total. - 102 agencies 80 of civil servants.
- Claimed improvements in services provision have
been closely questioned
- NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT. In New Zealand the
country pioneered NPM structural changes
- 300 separate central agencies and 40 ministries,
in addition to local and health service
authorities
James, O. (2003). The Executive Agency Revolution
in Whitehall Public interest versus
bureau-shaping perspectives, (Basingstoke
Palgrave Macmillan) Dunleavy, P. (2004). NPM is
Dead - Long Live Digital-Era Governance. London
School of Economics and Political Science.
11The Impact of NPM/NMS
- In NZ, impressive reforms, impressive results
turned the country around
- No one wants to return to the bad old days
- However, three unwanted side effects of NMS/NPM
are
- Duplicating costly separate management
hierarchies for very similar functions
- NPM radically increased institutional and policy
complexity
- NPM has eroded the citizens capacities for
solving social problems
12- The more difficult it is for citizens to
understand internal state arrangements and
operate appropriate access points to represent
their interests politically and administratively,
the more their autonomous capabilities to solve
policy problems may be eroded. - Dunleavy 2004
13An Illustration of NMS in the UK
14- DIGITAL ERA GOVERNANCE The Pursuit of
- E - government and E - democracy
15- The advent of the digital era is now the most
general, pervasive and structurally distinctive
influence on how governance arrangements are
changing in advanced industrial states. - (Dunleavy 2004).
16- DIGITAL ERA GOVERNANCE
- A whole complex of changes, which have ICT and
information-handling changes at their centre, but
which spread much more widely and will remake the
two distinct yet intertwined relationships
between the people and their governments - the one between the government and the citizen as
customer or consumer of public services
(transacting),
- and the other between the government and the
citizen as owner or shareholder (participation).
Page 16
17Democracy Defined
- Pluralistic competition among parties and
individuals for all positions of government
power
- Participation among equal citizens in the
selection of parties and representatives through
free, fair and periodic elections
- Civil and political liberties to speak, publish,
assemble, and organize, as necessary conditions
to ensure effective competition and participation
Joseph Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and
Democracy, New York Harper and Row, 1950.
18- Democracy works poorly when individuals hold
preferences and make judgements in isolation from
one another, as they too often do in todays
liberal democracies.
Mark E. Warren, What do we expect from more
Democracy?, Radically Democratic Responses to
Politics, Political Theory, Vol. 24, Issue 2,
May 1996.
19Direct Democracy Citizen Involvement
- Increased Citizen Participation. The concept of
direct democracy, where the citizen is
continually involved in an explicit way in the
decision-making process remains a powerful one
for some proponents of e-democracy and has an
undeniable moral appeal. - Legitimacy of Decisions. Direct democracy
incorporates not only the speed of decision
which is the greatest strength of the dictator,
but additional advantages which can never be
his. - ..intrinsic irresponsibility.
- Citizen Malaise and Apathy. According to recent
research, the opportunity to participate in
politics constantly ranks among the least
interesting things people want to do over the
internet.
Buckminster, Fuller, No More Second-hand God,
available at www.vote.org, 1940
Richard K. Moore, Democracy and Cyberspace, in
Hague, Barry N. and Loader, Brian D., editors,
Digital Democracy Discourse and Decision-making
in the Information Age. London and New York
Routledge, 1999
20Direct Democracy Citizen Involvement
- Knowledge and Expertise
- At the Local Level. It can be argued that having
a decision impact upon ones life gives one a
necessary understanding to make a decision
- At the National Level. There is a tendency for a
typical citizen to drop to a lower level of
mental performance as soon as he/she
contemplates national and global issues, he/she
tends to yield to irrational prejudice and
impulse, even if there is enough complete and
correct information available
Helena Catt, Democracy in Practice, London and
New York Routledge, 1999. Joseph Schumpeter, Ca
pitalism, Socialism, and Democracy, New York
Harper and Row, 1950.
21The Move to Self Government
- Thomas Jefferson once pointed out that if the
people appeared not enlightened enough to
exercise their control of government, the
solution was not to take away the control but to
inform their discretion by education. . If
these processes work, if they spread, if they
become an indispensable part of government at all
levels, we may take it as a sign that we, as a
people, have moved up a grade in democracys
school. It holds out the hope that, eventually,
we be ready for self government.
William Ruckelhaus, Restoring Public Trust in
Government, National Academy of Public
Administration, Nov 15, 1996.
22(No Transcript)
23The E government Continuum
- 1993 2006 ACCESS The implementation of a
passive presence on the Web. Government
websites provided information but there was no
interaction with the citizen - Research.
Challenge is TECHNOLOGICAL - 2005 2010 INTERACTION Using the Internet to
allow citizens to interact with government - from
paying taxes to renewing drivers licences
Transaction. Challenge is ORGANISATIONAL - 2010 beyond ENGAGEMENT Breaking down the
bureaucratic barriers to create functionally
oriented, citizen-centred government Web
presences Personalised Customer Service.
Challenge is SOCIAL
Adapted from Forrester The Future of E-
government. May 2005
24E - democracy
- E-democracy is the provision of high quality
information (explicit knowledge) and effective
communication tools for the specific purpose of
empowering people for able participation in
consultations and decision-making, both in their
capacity as consumers of public services and as
citizens
Margaret E. Phillips and Adrian Cunningham,
Keeping Online Information Accessible for
E-governance and E-democracy, A paper prepared fo
r the Australian Electronic Governance
Conference. Centre for Public Policy, University
of Melbourne, Melbourne Victoria, 14th and 15th
April, 2004.
25Transaction Participation
26- DRIVERS FOR DIGITAL ERA GOVERNANCE
27Why Harness the Transformational Potential of ICT?
- Reintegration the key opportunities for
exploiting digital-era technologies lie in
putting back together many of the elements that
NPM broke down into discrete corporate
hierarchies. This disaggregation placed the
burden on the citizen to integrate public
services into usable packages - Needs-based holism involves a systematic attempt
to re-prioritise away from the NPM emphasis on
business process management and towards a
genuinely citizen-based, services-based or
needs-based foundation of organisation
28Why Harness the Transformational Potential of ICT?
- 3. Digitalisation Processes closely connected
to the impacts of Web, internet and email upon
public agencies and most of its component changes
are at least partially captured under the
E-government label - Electronic services delivery covers the
substantial potential for most paper-based
administrative processes to be converted to
e-government processes - Radical disintermediation denotes the potential
for Web-based processes to allow citizens,
businesses and others to connect directly to
state systems without passing through the
previously universal gatekeepers in the form of
agency personnel - Organisational and cultural changes inside the
government sector, plus behavioural shifts by the
citizen
29NPM and ICTs
- NPM can be interpreted as a special and
prominent case of an attempt to deliver the
transformational properties of informatisation.
Full-blown NPM is an information-intensive reform
of the structures and processes of governance,
demanding new and complex horizontal and vertical
flows of information in and around government
organisations. Bellamy and Taylor (1994) - This proved much more complex in operation
- No close correlation between IT spend and
organisational effectiveness, in an NPM
environment, within UK and USA
- Large scale computer systems actually work
against NPM trends
30The Reality
Very few countries in the world are utilizing
all aspects of the E-government potential. None
does it to the full limit of this potential.
UN Global E-government Survey 2003.
UN Global E-government Survey 2003
31 32Barriers to Adoption of E-democracy
- Government and Citizen Will.
- The citizen must be brought more fully into the
equation
- Willingness of government and groups to provide
the necessary tools for citizen engagement and to
educate citizens on the importance of that
engagement
Cathia Gilbert Riley, The Changing Role of the
Citizen in the E-Governance E-Democracy
Equation, Commonwealth Centre for e-Governance,
2003
33Barcelona
- DIRECT DEMOCRACY UNDER CONSTRUCTION
34Barriers to Adoption of Full DEG
- The Legacy of NMS/NPM
- In the UK, NMS meant adding peripheral elements
to the pre-existing managerial system
- In NZ, NPM is the system (Schick 2001)
- What would replace it?
- Digital NPM
35The NPM/DEG Paradox
- Upside Fantastic reforms impressive results
- World leading AGILE GOVERNMENT
- Downside Increased complexity eroded citizen
competency duplication
- The ICTs and know-how is here
- Deliver direct gains in social problem solving
- Boost citizen competencies
- Reduce institutional and policy complexity
36Conclusion
- New Zealand is an ICT-enlightened nation with a
high level of education, technological literacy,
and a relatively homogeneous population. It is,
therefore, an ideal platform for employing
technology on a national scale to innovate
creating social change and economic benefit - To fully benefit from ICTs we need to resolve the
NPM/DEG paradox
- The answer is evolution not revolution
37EDS
- EDS is part of the ICT fabric that exists within
NMS/NPM
- Actively engaged with academics and practitioners
globally to better understand the next stage of
the evolution
- We believe we are key stakeholders in any future
transformation to DEG and welcome further debate
on the topic
38eds.com
stephen.griffin_at_eds.com