Does E-Government Improve Government Capacity?

Using a cross-country data set on e-government systems, this paper analyzes whether e-filing of taxes and e-procurement adoption improves the capacity of governments to raise and spend resources through the lowering of tax compliance costs, improvement of public procurement competitiveness, and reduction of corruption. The paper finds that information and communications technology can help improve government capacity, but the impact of e-government varies by type of government activity and is stronger in more developed countries. Implementation of e-filing systems reduces tax compliance costs as measured by the number of tax payments, time required to prepare and pay taxes, likelihood and frequency of firms being visited by a tax official, perception of tax administration as an obstacle, and incidence of bribery. The effects of e-procurement are weaker, with the number of firms securing or attempting to secure a government contract increasing with e-procurement implementation only in countries with higher levels of development and better quality institutions. The paper finds no systematic relationship between e-procurement and bureaucratic corruption.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kochanova, Anna, Hasnain, Zahid, Larson, Bradley
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016-04
Subjects:MOBILE APPLICATIONS, PUBLIC OFFICIALS, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONS, SERVICES TO CITIZENS, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, BRIBES, TELECOMMUNICATION, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, E-PAYMENT, E-GOVERNMENT SYSTEMS, PUBLIC SECTOR, E-GOVERNMENT TECHNOLOGY, GOVERNMENT, GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY, GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS, ENTERPRISE SURVEY, USE OF INFORMATION, PAYMENT SYSTEM, INFORMATION, MONITORING, E-PROCUREMENT, ENTERPRISE SURVEYS, E- PROCUREMENT, PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE, GOVERNMENT CAPACITY, ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT, MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, INFORMATION SYSTEMS, E-GOVERNMENT IMPLEMENTATION, FACE-TO-FACE CONTACT, E-GOVERNMENT, OPEN ACCESS, COMMUNICATIONS, INSTITUTIONS, TIME PERIODS, DATA, FREEDOM OF INFORMATION LAWS, ESERVICES, COMPUTERS, FUNCTIONALITIES, CUSTOMS, GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, PRODUCTIVITY, NUMBER OF VISITS, LIMITATIONS OF TECHNOLOGY, E-CUSTOMS, AUTOMATION, REDUCTION OF CORRUPTION, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM, DATABASES, GLOBAL E-GOVERNMENT, IMPACT OF TELECOMMUNICATION, TRANSACTIONS, MANUFACTURING, USERS, PHONE, TECHNOLOGY, HUMAN CAPITAL, BUSINESS OPERATIONS, PROCUREMENT, E-PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS, TRANSPARENCY, RESULTS, COMPETITIVENESS, REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT, PURCHASING POWER, MANAGEMENT SYSTEM, GOVERNMENT INFORMATION QUARTERLY, ADOPTION OF E-GOVERNMENT, BUSINESS INDICATORS, PRIVATE SECTOR, DATA INTEGRITY, SALES TRANSACTIONS, SUPPLY CHAIN, GOVERNMENT TECHNOLOGY, ADMINISTRATION, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ICT, FREEDOM OF INFORMATION, ELECTRONIC FILING, SECURITY, BUSINESS CLIMATE, BUSINESS, BUSINESSES, PHONES, PUBLIC SECTOR PERFORMANCE, HUMAN RESOURCES, PERFORMANCE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, INSPECTIONS, MOBILE PHONES, FUNCTIONALITY, PROFIT, SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, BUSINESS REGULATIONS, GOVERNMENT INFORMATION, POLICY FORMULATION, GOVERNMENT CONTRACT, CUSTOMERS, DATABASE, COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY, TECHNOLOGIES, PAYMENT SYSTEMS, BUSINESS PERFORMANCE, AUTHENTICATION, INNOVATIONS, PAYMENT OF TAXES, PUBLIC GOODS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26292557/e-government-improve-government-capacity-evidence-tax-administration-public-procurement
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/24231
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!