Syllabus: GS3/ Economy
In News
- Prime Minister Modi highlighted India’s readiness to share its digital public infrastructure with Commonwealth nations, viewing technology as a global public good that strengthens democracy.
Digital Public Infrastructure(DPI)
- Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) refers to a set of shared, secure, and interoperable digital systems built on open standards and governed by enabling rules such as policies, regulations, and institutions.
- DPI enables governments, citizens, and the private sector to interact digitally at scale in a trusted, inclusive, and low-cost manner.
- Like physical infrastructure, DPIs are indivisible, non-exclusionary, and create opportunities for public value.
- India’s DPI operates as a three-layered stack: Identity Layer (Aadhaar for unique ID), Payments Layer (UPI enabling real-time, low-cost transactions), and Data Layer (Account Aggregator for consent-based sharing).
Significance of DPI
- Efficient Public Service Delivery: DPI enables seamless platforms like GeM (surpassing ₹5 lakh crore GMV) and UMANG (2,300 services, 8.71 crore users), streamlining procurement, welfare delivery, and citizen-government interactions.
- Financial Inclusion Revolution: UPI powers 85% of India’s digital payments and ~50% of global real-time transactions, providing low-cost, instant access to millions of unbanked populations.
- Breaking Language Barriers: BHASHINI supports 35+ Indian languages and 1,600+ AI models across 22+ languages, making digital services accessible in diverse linguistic contexts.
- Enhanced E-Governance: The three-layered stack (Aadhaar, UPI, Account Aggregator) ensures interoperable, consent-based systems that reduce administrative costs and improve transparency.
- Global Soft Power & Diplomacy: India Stack Global and GDPIR position India as a digital leader, with MoUs (Armenia, Sierra Leone) exporting DPI solutions to the Global South.
Challenges
- Cyber Threats: RBI flagged risks of vendor dependence, cyber threats, and weak data protection frameworks .
- Digital Divide: Despite progress, rural and marginalized communities face gaps in connectivity and digital literacy.
- Interoperability & Standards: Need for global alignment of DPI standards to ensure cross-border adoption.
- Trust & Accountability: Concerns about surveillance, misuse of personal data, and lack of robust grievance redressal mechanisms.
Conclusion and Way Forward
- India’s DPI journey demonstrates how digital identity, payments, and governance platforms can transform societies.
- It has empowered millions, boosted economic growth, and set global benchmarks.
- However, addressing cybersecurity, privacy, and inclusivity challenges is essential to sustain trust and ensure equitable benefits.
- With continued investment in infrastructure, policy safeguards, and international collaboration, India can consolidate its role as a global leader in digital governance.
Source: Air
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