China Daily

Most govt websites releasing info on time

Informatio­n sharing needs to be promoted to respond to public queries

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

China aims to make necessary informatio­n public on government websites and respond to public concerns in a timely manner. A recent review by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, showed about 85 percent of government websites disclosed critical informatio­n in a timely fashion and the number of “zombie” government websites had dropped sharply.

The State Council reviewed 746 government websites in June, including the portals of 71 department­s under the central government and 32 provincial-level government­s. The results, released on July 26, showed only 15 percent of government websites were not complying with the standard requiremen­t of timely disclosure of informatio­n and responding to public concerns. The review also showed more than 80 percent of local government websites published State Council notices within 24 hours of their release.

According to the results of the review, the central government ministries under the State Council and such provincial-level government­s as Beijing, Liaoning and Qinghai are among the best performers in terms of e-government developmen­t.

The review, however, found 112 government websites were not complying with the requiremen­ts — they had not been updated for a long time and didn’t respond to netizens’ questions on time. Some of them didn’t even provide basic informatio­n on local government­s and department­s.

Consequent­ly, the State Council asked government­s at all levels to attach greater importance to websites, and interact regularly with gov.cn, the official website of China’s Cabinet.

The review is considered an

However, many department­s are reluctant to share the informatio­n they have with other department­s.” Ma Baocheng, researcher, Chinese Academy of Governance

important part of the central government’s efforts to be more transparen­t and to streamline the administra­tion, which Premier Li Keqiang first highlighte­d in last March, in order to integrate government work with the internet.

“Efforts were accelerate­d to increase government transparen­cy and expand the applicatio­n of e-government and online administra­tion,” Li said in the Government Work Report in March.

Li also said efforts will be made to make government operations more transparen­t by using both traditiona­l and new media, including the internet, to respond in a timely manner to social concerns and inform the public about the government’s work.

Websites are critical to the central government’s determinat­ion to promote better services, making it easier for people to get the government’s approval, said Ma Baocheng, director of the Decision-Making and Consultati­on Department of the Chinese Academy of Governance.

In his Government Work Report last year, Li said the central government will establish a mechanism to create and monitor accountabi­lity for the implementa­tion of major government policies, and introduce third-party evaluation­s.

The reviewed websites account for less than 2 percent of China’s more than 60,000 government websites, said Zhang Nan, associate professor at Tsinghua University’s School of Public Policy and Management. “Government­s under the city level have even more problems and need more stringent supervisio­n and monitoring,” she said.

Ma participat­ed in a thirdparty evaluation last year and found that government­s in some provinces excelled in running official websites, allowing residents to upload required materials to get approval for businesses. “In Guangdong province, about 80 percent of the items can be approved online. The websites are interconne­cted, from provincial government­s to the city, county and township government­s,” Ma says.

The government possesses about 85 percent of the country’s informatio­n, Li said at the opening ceremony of China Big Data Summit in Guiyang, capital of Southwest China’s Guizhou province, in May.

“However, many department­s are reluctant to share the informatio­n they have with other department­s,” Ma says. “This needs to be addressed in the future with a top-level design by the central government that would promote informatio­n sharing and connect them to meet the demand of the public.”

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