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10 Years of The Digital India Initiative

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Governance

Source: PIB

Context: India celebrated 10 years of the Digital India initiative on July 1. Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted its transformation from a governance scheme into a people-driven movement.

About 10 years of the Digital India Initiative:

What is Digital India?

Launched: 1st July 2015 by the Prime Minister of India. Ministry: Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). Vision: To transform India into a digitally empowered society and knowledge economy. Objective: Deliver digital infrastructure as a utility to every citizen, ensure governance & services on demand, and digitally empower citizens.

Launched: 1st July 2015 by the Prime Minister of India.

Ministry: Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY).

Vision: To transform India into a digitally empowered society and knowledge economy.

Objective: Deliver digital infrastructure as a utility to every citizen, ensure governance & services on demand, and digitally empower citizens.

Core Pillars of Digital India:

Broadband Highways: Ensure high-speed internet to rural and urban areas.

Universal Mobile Access: Expand network coverage in remote areas.

Public Internet Access Programme: Provide access through Common Service Centres (CSCs).

e-Governance: Simplify government procedures using IT.

e-Kranti: Deliver services electronically (education, health, etc.).

Information for All: Promote open data and citizen engagement.

Electronics Manufacturing: Promote domestic production.

IT for Jobs: Provide digital skill training.

Early Harvest Programmes: Quick-win projects like biometric attendance and Wi-Fi hotspots.

Achievements in 10 Years:

Internet Access: Internet connections grew from 25 crore (2014) to 96.96 crore (2024), expanding digital access to even remote rural regions.

Digital Payments: India leads the world in digital transactions, accounting for 49% of global real-time payments.

Digital Economy Contribution: The digital economy’s share in GDP rose to 11.74% (2022–23), and is projected to reach 13.42% (2024–25).

BharatNet: Over 2.18 lakh Gram Panchayats connected with high-speed optical fibre, improving last-mile connectivity.

DigiLocker: Over 53.92 crore citizens use DigiLocker to access documents like PAN, Aadhaar, and educational certificates online.

UMANG App: Offers 2,300+ services in 23 languages, with over 8.34 crore registered users.

Digital Literacy (PMGDISHA): Over 6 crore rural individuals trained in basic digital skills, empowering citizens to use smartphones and apps.

Aadhaar & DBT: ₹44 lakh crore transferred through Direct Benefit Transfers linked with Aadhaar, eliminating middlemen.

Success Factors of Digital India:

Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): Aadhaar for identity, UPI for payments, and DigiLocker for documentation created a strong digital foundation.

Cost-Effective Internet: India offers the world’s cheapest mobile data (~₹10/GB), enabling mass affordability.

Widespread Mobile Access: 4.74 lakh 5G towers now cover 99.6% of districts, enabling high-speed connectivity nationwide.

Start-up and MSME Boost: ONDC and GeM enabled small sellers and MSMEs to access nationwide digital markets.

AI and Semiconductors Push: IndiaAI and the ₹76,000 crore Semiconductor Mission focus on next-gen tech innovation.

Scope for Improvement:

Digital Divide: Significant disparities still exist in device ownership and internet usage, especially among women and the poor.

Data Protection: Citizens lack awareness of privacy rights and the Personal Data Protection Act is still evolving.

Regional Language Access: Though Bhashini supports 35+ languages, most digital content remains English-centric.

Infrastructure Gaps: Power cuts, low bandwidth, and poor last-mile delivery affect connectivity in hill, tribal, and border areas.

Skill Mismatch: Demand for high-end tech jobs far outpaces availability of skilled workforce, especially in AI and cybersecurity.

Way Ahead:

Strengthen Digital Education: Scale platforms like DIKSHA, SWAYAM, PM eVIDYA with vernacular and skill-based content.

Bridge Urban-Rural Gaps: Expand internet infrastructure, smartphone subsidies, and community training centres in under-served areas.

Promote Inclusive AI: Use AI for smart agriculture, flood alerts, healthcare diagnostics, and education access.

Improve Data Security: Strengthen CERT-In, implement data fiduciary norms, and raise awareness on digital safety.

Boost Digital Exports: Promote DPI models like UPI and Aadhaar in Global South, positioning India as a digital diplomacy leader.

Conclusion:

Digital India has redefined governance, service delivery, and empowerment over the last decade. As India advances towards becoming a Viksit Bharat, the next phase must focus on inclusivity, ethical innovation, and global digital leadership.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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