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    Adoption of e-tax services in Uganda : the perspective of the technology acceptance model

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    Book Chapter (389.4Kb)
    Date
    2012
    Author
    Maiga, Gilbert
    Asianzu, Elizabeth
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    Abstract
    The diverse benefits of e-government services are linked to its adoption and usage. E-government adoption rates in economically transiting countries remain low and so its benefits are not fully realized. This is partly because-governments have focused largely on the technical supply-side factors with little emphasis on the demand or consumers’ perspective of e-government adoption. The result has been a gap between what is offered and what is consumed. This paper presents the results of a study that develops a model for e-tax service adoption as an attempt to bridge the gap for this segment of e-government. Requirements for the model elicited in a field study are used to extend the Technology Acceptance Model which emphasizes consumer-based factors for e-tax adoption. The extended model has dimensions of adoption benefits, trust, attitudes, education, compatibility, awareness, accessibility, training, user support and local language use. It is generic and reusable for other countries in similar context.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10570/1995
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