While most e-government literature focuses on citizen satisfaction, that of public servants is widely ignored. The purpose of this study is to test the impact of e-government
maturity level on public servants’ job satisfaction. Factors shaping the maturity level of
e-government were investigated as well as those contributing to government employees’ satisfaction. Government employees working at Palestinian ministries were the
target group of this study. They were the closest to the strategic use of e-government facilities. A questionnaire was designed and distributed via e-mails to a random sample
of 159 employees; the survey questionnaire was divided into three parts. A 5-point
Likert scale was adopted in this study. SPSS v26 was used to test the study hypotheses.
The results reveal a significant impact of e-government maturity on the job satisfaction
of public servants (R2 = 0.386, p = 0.000). Moreover, all dimensions of e-government
maturity have a positive impact on job satisfaction. The results show the impact of
e-government maturity dimensions on job satisfaction as follows: internal efficiency
(R2 = 0.254, p = 0.000), external efficiency (R2 = 0.343, p = 0.000), good governance
(R2 = 0.364, p = 0.000), and leadership (R2 = 0.261, p = 0.000). The findings also show
no differences in job satisfaction levels among public servants due to demographic
characteristics.
Authors
Emad Waladali
Abdelbaset Rabaiah
Pages From
501
Pages To
515
ISSN
1810-5467
Journal Name
Problems and Perspectives in Management
Volume
20
Issue
3
Keywords
public servants, internal efficiency, external efficiency, good governance, leadership, satisfaction, model
Abstract