Deakin University
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Moving personal tax online: the Australian Taxation Office's E-Tax initiative

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journal contribution
posted on 2005-07-01, 00:00 authored by Jeff ChamberlainJeff Chamberlain, Tanya Castleman
In exploiting the capabilities of online technologies, governments have developed policies and launched projects to conduct transactions and deliver their services through the Internet. The motivations for this include cost cutting, efficiency improvements, service enhancements, and leadership in business transformation. However, these diverse goals are not necessarily consistent, especially in the early stages of implementation. The e-government initiative discussed in this case study (E-Tax) provided an additional service to individual Australian taxpayers by enabling them to file their tax returns online. This case study provides an analysis of the E-Tax implementation in the first three years of its operation. Data on E-Tax use compared to other filing methods show that the package worked well technically, was favorably received by users, and was consistent with policy on e-government. However, adoption levels in the early stages did not meet government targets. The analysis suggests that impediments to a greater level of E-Tax use included entrenched patterns of filing, the nature of the taxation system, and political sensitivities. The E-Tax case demonstrates how complex e-government projects can be and the need to take contextual factors into account in planning and evaluating e-government implementation.

History

Journal

International journal of cases on electronic commerce

Volume

1

Pagination

54 - 70

Location

Hershey, Pa.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1548-0615

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Idea Group Inc.