An e-government framework for assessing readiness for public sector e-procurement in a lower-middle income country
Peter Adjei-Bamfo,
Kwame Ameyaw Domfeh,
Justice Nyigmah Bawole,
Albert Ahenkan,
Theophilus Maloreh-Nyamekye,
Stephanie Adjei-Bamfo and
Samuel Antwi Darkwah
Information Technology for Development, 2020, vol. 26, issue 4, 742-761
Abstract:
Governments globally are leveraging information and communication technology (ICT) growth towards improving the quality of public procurement services for socio-economic development. However, the extent of its application differs across nations. Notwithstanding the extant theoretical and empirical literature on IT for development, knowledge on how to assess readiness for adopting a full e-procurement system in the public sector of lower and lower-middle income countries (LMICs) begs for understanding. With the narrative of Ghana, we address this gap by drawing on the institutional and economic theory and the United Nations E-Government Development Index towards a holistic framework beyond the dyad of linear website functionalities and internet focus of prior e-government adoption models. Elite interviews gathered from multiple cases from Ghana’s public sector reveals the key readiness determinants for a full public sector e-procurement system. This study has significant implications for shaping the process-oriented management of government e-procurement projects towards socio-economic development in LMICs amid their complex institutional and socio-technical environments.
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1080/02681102.2020.1769542
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