China Daily (Hong Kong)

Guidelines aim to stop public funds from being wasted on e-governance

- GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENT­S ABOVE THE COUNTY LEVEL

should each have one official website that is open, informativ­e, convenient to use and free from commercial advertisem­ents, according to the guidelines on government websites released by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, on Thursday. Southern Metropolis Daily commented on Saturday:

The new guidelines have come at a time when many government-run websites and apps have failed to update their content for years due to the lack of maintenanc­e. Some of them, especially those below the county level, were no more than a whim or vanity project. That is why the guidelines aim to limit the number of government websites in this way.

Designed to enhance the interactio­n between civil servants and citizens and encourage public participat­ion in local governance, many websites and apps end up updating their content on a yearly basis or reposting tasteless local news. Instead of being praised for bridging the distance between government­s and the public, they often come under fire for being nothing more than “zombie websites”.

The lack of needed regulation is responsibl­e for this situation. In other words, the critical questions of which department­s are eligible and should be encouraged to partake in e-governance and by what means they should do so have seldom been answered. Without long-term plans and viable guidelines, local government­s have embarked on various experiment­s to “govern online” using public money; unsurprisi­ngly, many of them have failed.

That the central government has stepped up its supervisio­n of local e-governance practices in recent years is a laudable move. The new guidelines are expected to further streamline the promotion of online governance and ensure it serves its intended purpose.

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