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Freitag, 19.12.2025
Transforming Government since 2001
When Guangzhou resident Ma Yiyong, 57, went to renew his unemployment certificate last month, something extraordinary happened: he did so efficiently and discreetly, with a few keystrokes. "It used to be really troublesome in the past," says Ma. "I would have to stand in line several times, and sometimes the government officials weren't at their desks. Now it's fast." China's romance with e-government is now reaching the grass-roots level, bringing efficiency and convenience to citizens. But its biggest benefit may be in circumventing one of the last bastions of communism: the infamous neighborhood committees. These groups of local party members have for decades served as the authorities' eyes and ears. They were also notorious busybodies, making it their business to know who was having marital problems, grumbling about the government or out of work.

Citizens in Guangzhou, the capital of one of China's most prosperous provinces, now go directly to the source. In several pilot neighborhoods, they can apply for official documents, gripe about uncollected garbage or post their opinions about current affairs, all online. "Now we can react faster and devote more time to solving problems," says Chen Zhenqiang, head of the government office in Liurongjie, a pilot neighborhood.

The committees still track who's renting out property or who's planning to have a child. But now married women who want to get pregnant need only apply online for a single bright-green "family planning services" certificate.

Government departments have also begun using similar software and databases so they can better share information. That should streamline bureaucracy—and make official surveillance easier. Guangzhou residents, though, don't seem worried about their privacy. "It's the government I'm dealing with, so it must be OK," says Ma. After decades of putting up with bumbling apparatchiks, a high-tech Big Brother must seem like progress.

Autor: Melinda Liu

Quelle: Newsweek International, Oct. 2004

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