Government Bureaucracy

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Discussion Board Forum 5_Week 5
Informed decision-making is an important aspect for working in the government. According to Milakovich and Gordon, provide some examples of how information technology can be used to assist bureaucrats in decision-making?
Provide some examples of how information technology can be used to assist bureaucrats in decision-making. Bureaucracy has long become a demoralizing challenging area for the political parties in the United States. Since, the National Partnership for Reinventing Government (NPRG) reform efforts, the separating of the Department of Health and Human Services and the Social Security department the bureaucratic reform has the potential to advance the prehistoric process of the SSA. For instance,
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For instance, the office of Electronic Government (EG) was established by the Bush Administration in 2002 to administer provisions of the Electronic Government Act (p.440) A citizen-focused government is the results of the electronic government system because the government information may be available to some and not others, therefore, a digital divide helps the citizens to differentiate the difference in technology caused by inequalities in education, income, and access to computers and the internet (p.452). Also, E-Gov. helps reform the administration of bureaucracy by reinventing government emphasize. For instance, the public sector is seen as a continuation of the political system and therefore representative of the same basic values. According to, Shafrutz & Hyde, 2012, the chief merit of bureaucracy is its technical efficiency, with a premium placed on precision, speed, expert control, continuity, discretion, and optimal returns on input (p. 101). Which brings the next government sector which helps bureaucracy in decision making.
Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA). Another example, Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA). FISMA provides general authority to the OMB director and individual agencies to develop and maintain federal information security policies and practices; requires agencies to conduct annual independent evaluations of their information security programs and practices (p.440). Although this agency pays more attention to the policy and procedures of the electronic government, the officials must be accountable to the citizens and not the