Volume, benefits and factors that influence inter-municipal ICT cooperation in relation to ICT-related social services and healthcare services

Authors

  • Ari Juhani Helin University of Turku
  • Tomi Dahlberg Turku School of Economics at University of Turku, Turku, Finland and Aalto University Business School, Helsinki, Finland

Keywords:

information systems, information management, communication, municipalities, social services, healthcare ICT

Abstract

Information and communication technology (ICT) has become an integral part of the daily municipal administration, production and development of municipal services. Social services and health care account for ≥ 50% of municipal ICT expenditure. Municipalities operate and develop their ICT activities with limited ICT resources. This is an incentive for inter-municipal ICT cooperation. Four sets of secondary data are analysed in this article to evaluate how ICT cooperation is carried out in 20 Finnish municipal regions. Transaction cost economics (TCE), resource-based view (RBV), resource dependency theory (RDT) and the concepts of Granovetter’s social network theory are reviewed. The data are used to describe the expected and perceived economic and social benefits of inter-municipal ICT cooperation, and to understand the social connections that influence the execution of inter-municipal ICT cooperation. The data analysis revealed distinctive differences in the amount and forms of ICT cooperation, and regarding its governance. The results suggest that public organisations were able to benefit substantially from well-organised ICT cooperation. The characteristics of social networks were also found to relate to variations in the degree to which ICT cooperation was performed.

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Section
Scientific articles

Published

2017-11-29

How to Cite

Helin, A. J., & Dahlberg, T. (2017). Volume, benefits and factors that influence inter-municipal ICT cooperation in relation to ICT-related social services and healthcare services. Finnish Journal of EHealth and EWelfare, 9(4), 299–312. https://doi.org/10.23996/fjhw.61065