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10 April 2012

e-Government of Korea : Success Factors and International Cooperation. 10 April 2012. Park, deoksoo Director, MOPAS Republic of Korea. Contents. I. Brief History of the Korea’s e-Government. II. Best Practices of e-Government. III. Key Achievements and Success Factors. IV.

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10 April 2012

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  1. e-Government of Korea : Success Factors and International Cooperation 10 April 2012 Park, deoksoo Director, MOPAS Republic of Korea

  2. Contents I. Brief History of the Korea’s e-Government II. Best Practices of e-Government III. Key Achievements and Success Factors IV. International Cooperation

  3. I. Brief History of the Korea’s e-Government

  4. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 1. History of Korea’s e-Government I. Korea’s e-Government in Brief Inception 1978~1996 Foundation Building Administrative Networks(1987~1996)Implementing Administrative Computerization(1978~1987) 1996~2000 Promoting Informatization Launch 2001~2002 11 major tasks for e-Government Services Diffusion Maturity 2003~2007 31 major tasks for e-Government Services 2008~ Expansion of integrationof e-Government 4

  5. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 2. Current Status of Korea’s e-Government I. Korea’s e-Government in Brief Foundation Service Advancement Phase 1 Phase 2 • Consolidation of internal administrative procedure and establishment of common basis • Selective public service reform • Advancement of internal administrative procedure • Expansion of integrated civil service We are Here ! Phase 2 Level 4 Connected Phase 1 Level 3 Transactional Level 2 • Connected online service provided by agencies • Converged public/ civil services Enhanced Level 1 • Visa, passport, birth records obtained online • Taxes & fees paid online Emerging • Regularly updated contents and information • Limited web presence 5 5

  6. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 5. 2012 UN e-Government Survey 1st out of 193 countries e-Gov Development Index Online Participation Index 1st (1.00) 1st 1st 1st 1st(1.00) (Total) (Total) 2nd(0.98) 6th ’08 ’12 ’10 ’08 ’12 ’10 Online Service Index (Web Index) Telecommunication Infra. Index Human Capital Index 6th(0.94) 7th(0.83) 1st(1.00) 1st(1.00) 7th(0.99) 10th(0.69) 13th(0.64) 10th(0.98) 6th(0.82) ’08 ’10 ‘12 ’10 ’12 ’08 ’08 ’12 ’10 6

  7. II. Best Practices of e-Government

  8. Ministry of Public Administration and Security e-Government’s 6 most valuable Brands II. Best Practices of e-Government 1. E-Procurement : KONEPS • Bidding procedures are now processed online in a one-stop process In 2009, over 70% of Korea’s total public procurement (122 billion USD) was conducted through KONEPS * Users : 191,000 businesses and 41,000 agencies • Korea recieves UN public Service Award(PSA) in 2003 and was introduced as • a best practice model for transparency enhancement by OECD 2. E-Customs : UNI-PASS • World’s top-level custom administration being achieved through process • innovation and informatization since 1992 Ex/Import declaration, in-port, freight management, drawback, etc. • Time reduction and Passengers flow acceleration to advanced level Export : more than 1 day → within 2 minutes Import : 2.5 hours → 1.5 hours 40 minutes (Before) → 25 minutes (After) 8

  9. Ministry of Public Administration and Security e-Government’s 6 most valuable Brands II. Best Practices of e-Government 3. Governmental Information Data Center : GIDC • Separately managed information systems are consolidated by establishing NCIA Information systems of 47 government agencies integrated and managed together • Seamless & Flawless Operation Achieved Monthly system failure time : 67 min → 1.15min • Security Environment Consolidated 8-layer protection / 4-step analysis against intrusion Cyber attack / intrusion detection system equipped 4. E-Patents : KIPOnet • Patent administration is informatized including application, examination, • certificate services, etc Service available 24 hours, 365 days Online Processing Systems for PCT • Examination period for Patent applications is shortened to 9.8 months through enhanced efficiency 9

  10. Ministry of Public Administration and Security e-Government’s 6 most valuable Brands II. Best Practices of e-Government 5. Internet Civil Services (MINWON24) • People can use administrative services anytime, anywhere through the Internet Detailed information on 5,300 types of service is provided online. Up to 3,020 types of civil services are able to be requested by citizen at home without visiting administrative offices. 1,028 types of civil documents are issued online 6. Online Petition and Discussion Portal (e-People) • Complaints, proposals, policy discussions and corruption reporting integrated • into a single window Provide Opinions on unfair administrative handling, infringements of their rights, and interests, improvement of institutions, and various policies through e-People • Receiving and Processing people’s complaints and suggestions through e-People All administrative organizations are linked to the e-People service. 10

  11. III. Key Achievements and Success Factors

  12. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 1. Key Achievements III. Key Achievements and Success Factors Increased Efficiency and Transparency of Administration • On-nara BPS: Paperless electronic administration through online services On-nara BPS Usage Rate: 100% (2011), Available agencies: 81 central administrative agencies and local gov’t • E-People: Providing one-stop service to the citizen in integrating complaint-handling systems of central and local government Processing complaint duration : simple 12 days (2005)  6.1 days (2010), complex 36.1 days (2005)  9.4 days (2010), Advanced administrative services & enhanced online environment • Ongoing of “at-home citizen services” such as online civil appeals and tax services • Change in citizens’ purchasing and financial patterns, such as e-banking transactions and e-trade e-Banking subscribers: 5.921million (2009). e-Commerce market size: USD 600 billion (2007) Initiate Korea’s Economic Growth • Investment in national Informatization as a driving force for economic growth IT’s contribution to national GDP growth: 19.2%(2010) IT investment plan: KRW 109.7 trillion in facility investment in 2009~2013, USD 58 billion on R&D investment 12

  13. Ministry of Public Administration and Security Ministry of Public Administration and Security 2. Critical Success Factors (1) III. Key Achievements and Success Factors Strong Government Leadership • Leadership from the President • Strategic and sustainable plans for 20 years • Nationwide change management program • Aligned e-Government projects with Performance Evaluation IT Governance • Presidential Committee On Gov’t National Informatization Strategy Committee chaired by • the Prime Minister mediates and private expert and guides the administrative branches • Assigned CIO for central and regional e-Government and created dedicated support structures • Utilized specialized e-Government technical support agencies • *National Information Society Agency, Korea Local Information Resarch & Development Institute • Revision of the legislative system for government process reform * Act on Expansion of Dissemination and Promotion of Utilization of Information System (1986), Framework Act on Informatization Promotion(1996), Digital Signature Act(1999), e-Government Act(2001), Act on Shared Utilization of Public Administration Information(2010), etc. 13 13

  14. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 2. Critical Success Factors (2) III. Key Achievements and Success Factors Customer-oriented e-Government Services • Service development based on the needs of citizens, company and other organizations • Civil Service closely related to everyday life * Korea's e-Customs, e-Procurement, and e-Patent solutions grew to become globally recognized brand products Sustained Investment in e-Government Budget • 1% of the national budget was invested into e-Government construction every year • Created and utilized the Information and Telecommunication Promotion Fund to build • early e-Government * Appropriated 10% of the informatization budget for e-Government support projects by MOPAS in order to effectively implement multi-ministry horizontal projects (2004) 14

  15. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 2. Critical Success Factors (3) III. Key Achievements and Success Factors Performance-based Program Management • Clear goals, objectives, short and long-term plans, with expected expenditure, income • streams and deadlines • Qualitative, Quantitative Performance Index (KPI) for nationwide level and each project level • Designation of an officer or organizing body in charge of project performance Change Management of Public Officers • Overcame issues such as public officer’s fear of workforce reduction due to • e-Government deployment, and resistance in using information systems through • sustained change management education Technology Support • Participation of experienced system Integration companies and specialized solution vendors • Adoption of practical technology; GIS (Geographical Information System), LBS (Location-Based • Service), Component Based Developing technology, etc…) 15

  16. IV. International Cooperation

  17. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 1. Information Access Centers(IACs) VI. International cooperation • 29 IACs for Internet access, education, and international cooperation in 29 developing countries • All IACs are composed of IT training labs, internet lounges, seminar rooms, and administrative offices, and are equipped with approximately 60 PCs and other ICT devices. • Bolivia, ‘10 • Laos, ‘05 • Kenya, ‘07 • Algeria, ‘09 • Cambodia, ‘02 • Tunisia, ‘05 • Guatemala, ‘08 • Morocco, ‘09 • Jordan, ‘10 • Rumania, ‘03 • Paraguay, ‘09 • Mozambique, ‘08 • Indonesia, ‘06 • Nepal, ‘11 • Vietnam, ‘03 • Ukraine, ‘12 • Nigeria, ‘06 • Sri Lanka, ‘08 • Peru, ‘09 • Egypt, ‘04 • Kyrgyzstan, ‘10 • Ghana, ‘12 • Mongolia, ‘07 • Azerbaijan, ‘08 • Philippines, ‘04 • Uzbekistan, ‘07 • Bangladesh, ‘08 • Bulgaria, ‘04 • Rwanda, ’10 IACs to open in 2012 : Panama, Myanmar, Vietnam, Moldova, Colombia 17

  18. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 2. Korea IT Learning Program VI. International Cooperation • Invite government officials and state-owned businessmen to Korea to share strategies to design IT policies and know-how to promote IT development • Topics covered are policies, technologies, and current issues on informatization, e-governance, information security, broadcasting, e-government system integration, etc. [ KoIL Network by Year] [ KoIL Network by Region] 18

  19. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 3. Korea IT Volunteers Program VI. International Cooperation • Send out IT-skilled univ. students to the organizations of developing countries to help develop IT capacity and promote cultural exchange IT training & projects, cultural exchange events, and other services laptops, digital cameras, materials for lectures and culture promotion 19

  20. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 4. Government to Government Cooperation VI. International Cooperation • Established cooperation frameworks with 12 countries by singing MOUs • Follow-up activities of MOUs are coordinated by IT Cooperation Committee 20

  21. MOU Signing IT Ministry Of Foreign Countries 외국정부 MOPAS 행안부 IT 부처 Collaboration Projects 협력사업 국내 IT 기업 Ministry of Public Administration and Security Ministry of Public Administration and Security 5. Strengthening Government to Government Cooperation VI. International Cooperation Establishing MOUs with 5 Strategic Countries • Establishing MOUs with Sri Lanka, Philippines, • SICA, UAE, Turkey • Signing MOUs between MOPAS and IT • Ministry of each countries Cooperative Committee Holding a Cooperative Committee with 4 Countries • For conducting collaboration projects holding a • Cooperative Committee with • - Vietnam, Bulgaria (the 1st half of 2012) • - Brunei, Morocco, Kuwait (the 2nd half of 2012) 21 21

  22. Ministry of Public Administration and Security 6. Establishing Public-Private Global Partnership Network VI. International Cooperation 2012 e-Government Global Forum • Backgrounds • - Creation Smart Government Global Forum • to discuss international problems and enlarge • international outreach in the area of • Informatization • Participants • - e-Government high-level officers, IT Learning • Program participants (Digital Development • Forum), UN, OECD representatives, Academia, • Korean IT Business 22

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