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NITI Aayog India’s Data Imperative Report

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Governance

Source: LM

Context: NITI Aayog released its report “India’s Data Imperative: The Pivot Towards Quality”, recommending urgent reforms to improve the quality of India’s public data ecosystem.

About NITI Aayog India’s Data Imperative Report:

What it is?

• India’s data ecosystem refers to the vast network of digital public infrastructure, platforms, and databases that power governance, welfare delivery, and financial inclusion across both public and private sectors.

• It integrates identity (Aadhaar), financial (UPI), health (Ayushman Bharat), and social schemes through data-driven platforms.

Key Data Points:

Aadhaar: Over 27 billion authentications conducted in FY 2024–25 — backbone of identity-linked service delivery.

UPI: ₹23.9 trillion worth of transactions processed monthly — world’s largest real-time payment system.

Ayushman Bharat: 369 million Ayushman Bharat Digital Health IDs issued — transforming health data interoperability.

Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT): ₹5.47 lakh crore transferred via DBT to beneficiaries in FY 2024–25, covering 330+ schemes.

Aadhaar e-KYC: 1.8 billion e-KYC transactions completed in FY 2024–25, reducing onboarding costs across sectors.

Digital India penetration: 1.2 billion mobile subscribers; 800 million internet users — one of the world’s largest digital user bases

Need for Robust Data Ecosystem:

Prevent Fiscal Leakage: Inaccurate data leads to duplicate or erroneous beneficiaries, causing 4–7% excess welfare spending each year.

Enable Evidence-Based Governance: High-quality data is the backbone for AI-driven insights and precise targeting of government schemes and interventions.

Build Public Trust: Citizens’ trust in digital governance rests on the ability of public systems to deliver accurate, reliable, and timely services.

Strengthen India’s AI Ecosystem: AI models and platforms depend on clean and validated data to drive innovation in healthcare, agriculture, and e-governance.

Improve Cross-Ministerial Coordination: Interoperable, accurate data allows for better policy alignment across departments, improving the efficiency of public service delivery.

Challenges in India’s Data Ecosystem:

Fragmentation: Government data systems remain siloed, with incompatible formats and platforms across ministries hindering seamless usage.

Lack of Ownership: No clear custodian or accountable body is responsible for end-to-end data quality across national and state departments.

Legacy IT Systems: Outdated digital infrastructure delays real-time updates and obstructs seamless interoperability across modern platforms.

Incentive Mismatch: Current practices reward fast data entry rather than prioritising accuracy and validation, compromising data integrity.

Poor Quality Culture: An informal acceptance of “80% accuracy is good enough” reduces accountability and leads to systemic data errors over time.

Recommended Way Ahead:

Institutionalising Ownership: Appoint dedicated data custodians at national, state, and district levels.

Incentivising Quality: Integrate error rates and data quality metrics into performance reviews and budget incentives.

Promote Interoperability: Standardise data formats using IndEA, NDGFP frameworks to break silos.

Deploy Practical Tools: Adopt NITI Aayog’s Data Quality Scorecard and Maturity Framework for regular self-assessment.

Invest in Capacity Building: Train field staff and managers to uphold data fidelity as a core responsibility.

Conclusion:

NITI Aayog’s data quality framework is a vital step toward precision-driven governance. India must now embed data stewardship, incentives, and interoperability across all levels to ensure public trust and maximise the benefits of its digital infrastructure.

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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