The paper develops a theoretical and methodological framework for conceptualizing a service-oriented paradigm of customs administration within the economic security agenda of both the state and business, and for assessing the balance between procedural service quality and the effectiveness of risk-based control. The study advances a working hypothesis that service orientation strengthens economic security only when it is institutionally aligned with a risk-based approach, compliance mechanisms, and resilient digital infrastructure; otherwise, accelerating procedures may increase the likelihood of misdeclaration and expand shadow practices. The methodological design relies on conceptual modeling, systems and comparative-logical analysis, and the operationalization of key concepts through observable indicators. The results include: a refined conceptual apparatus and a set of operational indicators; a typology of customs services by purpose, value for traders, and risk profile; and a “service–risk–security” conceptual model linking the service contour, the risk contour, and data/digital infrastructure via intermediate effects such as lower transaction costs, higher compliance, greater transparency, and improved detection quality. The findings support a policy logic of achieving a “smart balance” between facilitation and security and provide a basis for further empirical validation.
Falchenko et al. (Mon,) studied this question.