eGov-March-2010-[32-33]-e-Forms-Centerpiece of e-Governance Initiatives in India

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e-Forms: Centerpiece of e-Governance Initiatives in India www.cisco.com

INDIA took a major leap of faith on September 18, 2006, when the Ministry of Company Affairs (MCA) made e-Filing of returns to the Registrar of Companies (RoC) mandatory for all companies in India. The initiative under the country’s MCA 21 project was aimed at automating the processes related to the proactive enforcement and compliance of the legal requirements under the Companies Act, 1956. , For the project, fortunately, standardisation of its various forms was not a big hindrance as the proposed service, despite being a nationwide rollout, was related to just one department, and there was enough political and bureaucratic support to ensure its smooth run. However, despite a massive success of the project that has truly enabled anytime and anywhere MCA services to businesses, the other departments which interact with these businesses cannot, in any way, benefit from the repository of valuable data that the Ministry collects from companies and its directors from across the country. Besides, it also does not allow companies to significantly streamline their interaction with the government as they are still required to re-file the same or substantially similar information to multiple departments. This issue may however soon be a thing of past once departments start following standards for electronic forms and share common information on individuals and businesses. Experts suggest that standardisation of information collection, storage and digitisation of forms are the next crucial steps for making e-Government services 32

www.egovonline.net

CISCO SYSTEMS INDIA

Standardisation of information collection, storage and digitisation of forms are the key factors for making e-Government services work in India

successful in the country. As a foundation step, some of the states have already deployed State Wide Area Networks (SWANs) and are in the process of completing Common Service Centers (CSC) deployment and putting in place the State Data Centers (SDCs). In India, eForms will ride on these three pillars-SWAN, SDC and CSC. • The SWAN infrastructure helps in

connecting all state government offices, horizontally and vertically SDC is used for hosting the state service delivery gateway (SSDG) and state portal and forms the main engine of e-Forms. CSC is the main access point for citizens and will be used for filling up e-Forms from a remote rural location

Joan McCalla and Prakash Kumar of Internet Business Solutions Group, Cisco at CSI Regional e-Governance Summit 2009, Hyderabad


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