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e-Government at the crossroads

e-Government at the crossroads

By:  Jeffrey Roy  On: 31 Jan 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

As Stephen Harper’s Conservatives prepare to take office in Ottawa, many in technology circles are asking themselves: what will this new leader and his team have in store for e-government in Canada?

That mentality found its way into the Martin government to some degree, with the promised savings from service and infrastructure reforms already earmarked for new program spending. The danger is that the Conservatives may be tempted to squeeze further, limiting the upfront investments still required to achieve greater returns down the road. However, with substantial federal surpluses forecast for the coming years, there is also some room to manoeuvre.

The second, related theme is federalism and the interplay of federal and provincial governments. A Conservative government will likely be more inclined to accept a somewhat smaller federal administration in favour of devolved resources and authority to the provinces and cities. At the very least, public servants working within the federal government will face a new political culture predicated more on collaboration than what has often been a top-down imposition of federal solutions and initiatives. The implications here for Service Canada and its provincial counterparts are important.

The third and final theme to watch for is a greater openness to private sector involvement in reforming, upgrading and even transforming federal architecture. Still, technology companies hoping for massive outsourcing deals along the lines of those which emerged elsewhere in the 1990s should be cautious.

More and larger partnerships may well emerge, but the interplay of these three themes will determine their form and ultimately their success. For instance, those in both industry and government should be careful to avoid promises of unrealistic cost savings in the short term. A Conservative government may also prove open to new thinking on shared inter-governmental solutions, an approach requiring a new political dialogue that will take some time to emerge.

Jeffrey Roy (roy@management.uottawa.ca) is associate professor at the University of Ottawa. He is the author of, E-Government in Canada: Transformation for the Digital Age, due for release in March.










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Jeffrey Roy Jeffrey Roy is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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