Q&A: How e-governance can change Africa

ABIDJAN — As Africa becomes increasingly digitally connected, the introduction of e-governance could be a tool that increases government efficiency, accountability, and transparency.

Countries such as Rwanda, Ethiopia, and Mauritius have already introduced national ICT policies that established centralized information data centers as well as installing a national fiber-optic backbone network that increased internet accessibility and affordability. Their ICT strategies recognize the sector as an enabler of socioeconomic development, political decentralization, and sound governance.

Technology experts in Estonia — a place where 99 percent of all public services are available online — argue Africa could be the next frontier for e-governance, leapfrogging traditional governance infrastructure in a way that was seen with the explosion of mobile technology on the continent. However, national governments still need to address barriers such as underdeveloped telecommunications infrastructures, limited political support, and low literacy rates.

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