E-Governance in India: M. P. Satija Prof & Head Dept. of Lib. Inf. Sc. Guru Nanak Dev University Amritsar-143005
E-Governance in India: M. P. Satija Prof & Head Dept. of Lib. Inf. Sc. Guru Nanak Dev University Amritsar-143005
E-Governance in India: M. P. Satija Prof & Head Dept. of Lib. Inf. Sc. Guru Nanak Dev University Amritsar-143005
M. P. Satija Prof & Head Dept. of Lib. Inf. Sc. Guru Nanak Dev University Amritsar-143005 [email protected]
E-governance is to provide online access to government services, schemes, and information to all the citizens. Formally it is defined as delivery of government services and information to the citizens through info-networks. Govt. is large and huge, but governance has been little. We are called a soft state. By definition e- governance goes beyond the application of IT in govt. functioning, yet IT is backbone of the whole process. Internally it is to increase the inter and intra-departmental flow of information for both coordination and efficiency. It builds a bridge between various government departments and the people. Reduces papers work and cuts red tapism.
Its applications are varied and always expanding to: Taxation, revenue and land records Law enforcement and Courts. E-Commerce, banking and business regulations, Education and Research Retails,Transport and E-ticketing Agriculture, Health and Community Services
Advantages
It promotes economy and efficiency for good governance , equal and widened access to government officials and information. It facilities Govt-Citizen interface; it promotes transparency and consequently accountability, and reduces corruption. Govt is now a facilitator instead of a controller It is public management and citizen participation by marking the services citizen-centric In overall it saves common citizen from harassment and ultimately brings economy and efficiency in administration.
IT Act 2001
In pace with these global trends, India has also undertaken massive initiatives to introduce e-governance at the national, state and local levels. In fact India was one of the few developing countries venturing into e-governance by legislating IT Act in 2001. In terms of the total number of government websites, although the advanced industrial countries top the list, India is still ranked 7th in the global list
Connectivity
Computerization and connectivity were defined as the main goals of the 10th Five Year Plan (20022007). The Government had set the target of delivering at least 25% of its dealings and services electronically by taking all needed measures. Obviously goal has not been reached. Expansion is on going.
On the recommendations of the National Task Force on IT, a new Ministry of Communication and Information Technology was created in 1999 to act as a nodal agency for implementing official policies on IT and to facilitate the growth of the IT sector.
The government had approved the National e-governance plan for its implementation during the year 2003-2007. The plan laid the foundation and provided the impetus for long term growth of e-governance in the country. The plan had a budget of Rs. 6000 million with a matching amount allotted by the Planning Commission. The World Bank provided $500 million assistance for various e-governance plans.
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Drishtee
Meaning vision, it offers e-governance, education and health services through a software package which facilitates communication and information interchange within a localized intranet between villages and a district centre. This is operational in five Indian states, namely, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh. The objective of the project is to use IT to serve rural people directly rather than through civil servants
Ikisan.com
1. The Nagarjuna Group has developed this website which offers weather forecasts, commodity news, products availability online loan facilities, chat rooms and network with other farmers. It has also initiated setting up websites for farmers in 13 Indian states to provide agriculture advice as well as commodity prices for farmers in their own languages (htttp://www.ikisan.com).
Causes of Concern
In spite of some encouraging ranking and responses, the e-governance in India has not shown any promising results even in terms of service delivery. The gains in India are on the technical side and the organizational and behavioral dimensions of the process of governance are ignored. The result is that application of IT is half-hearted and it has delivered less than optimal results. There is a general feeling that the key challenges with e-governance are not technology or Internet issues, but organizational issues like redefining rules and procedures, information transparency, legal issues, infrastructure, skill and awareness, info literacy access to authentic sources through enforcement of the right to information, interdepartmental collaboration and tendency to resist the work culture. Adopting a holistic approach can give desirable results. It is a big challenge as our Ex. President Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam says, providing e-governance services to over one billion people is a big challenge. No country has ever implemented it.
Credits
Agarwal, Ashok E-Goverence: case studies Hyderabad: University Press, 2007. Ghosh, D. K. Digital India: New Delhi: UPSPD, 2006. www.mit.gov.in www.nic.in Thank you MPS