The study was commissioned in March by the British government's Office of the e-Envoy and the Information Age Partnership, a think tank of 30 chief executive officers and top ranking managers from Europe's leading information and communications technology companies.
Booz Allen was asked to develop a framework for measuring the e-commerce progress of the G7 countries - Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom and United States - plus Australia and Sweden, and to assess the United Kingdom's progress towards its goal of becoming the best environment in the world for e-commerce.
The study found:
- Sweden, the United States, Canada and Australia have the strongest e-government development, driven by their early initiatives and a sustained commitment.
- The citizens of Canada, Sweden and the United States are the most involved in the e-economy because of training initiatives and efforts to increase use of personal computers.
- The adoption and use of online technologies to change the way businesses work is most developed in the United States and Sweden.
The study found that Sweden, the United States, Canada and Australia have the most advanced e-government programs. Booz Allen found that:
- Strong government leadership and a dual focus on back-office integration and front-office service delivery are essential for integrating the e-economy into government. The United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom are leaders in this area.
- Nations that previously lagged in e-government are making serious efforts to advance, such as Germany with its e-government policy "BundOnline."
- Few governments have effective approaches to measure the impact of their e-government policies. Sweden and Australia lead in this area.
Quelle: Washington technology