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Peering into India’s Digital Divide

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Governance

Source: TH

Context: The Comprehensive Modular Survey: Telecom 2025 (CMS) by the NSS reveals deep insights into India’s digital usage patterns, highlighting a shift from basic connectivity to meaningful digital empowerment.

About Peering into India’s Digital Divide:

What is Digital Divide?

Definition: Digital divide refers to the unequal access to digital technologies (like smartphones, Internet, ICT skills) across different population groups.

Key Features: Access Gap: Variations in mobile ownership and internet availability. Usage Gap: Differences in the purpose (e.g., entertainment vs. education) of digital use. Skill Gap: Inability to use ICT productively, like word processing or cybercrime reporting. Gender Gap: Lower digital empowerment among women and girls.

Access Gap: Variations in mobile ownership and internet availability.

Usage Gap: Differences in the purpose (e.g., entertainment vs. education) of digital use.

Skill Gap: Inability to use ICT productively, like word processing or cybercrime reporting.

Gender Gap: Lower digital empowerment among women and girls.

Trends in Digital Divide in India (NSS 2025):

Access Trends: 97.1% youth use mobile phones; 73.4% own them. Ownership: Urban youth – 82%, Rural – 69.3%, Males – 83.3%, Females – 63%.

• 97.1% youth use mobile phones; 73.4% own them.

• Ownership: Urban youth – 82%, Rural – 69.3%, Males – 83.3%, Females – 63%.

Usage Trends: 91.3% of young women now use Internet (up from 77.1% in 2022). 30.4% use Internet only for entertainment and higher among females (36%).

• 91.3% of young women now use Internet (up from 77.1% in 2022).

• 30.4% use Internet only for entertainment and higher among females (36%).

Skill Trends: 85.1% can send attachments, only 32.2% created presentations, 22.9% drafted documents. Online banking: 68.7% youth, Female (57.5%) vs. Male (79.3%); Rural (63.4%) vs. Urban (79.7%).

• 85.1% can send attachments, only 32.2% created presentations, 22.9% drafted documents.

• Online banking: 68.7% youth, Female (57.5%) vs. Male (79.3%); Rural (63.4%) vs. Urban (79.7%).

Connectivity: 91.6% urban households vs. 83.3% rural households have Internet. Only 7.2% of households have fibre-optic connections; rural share only 3.2%.

• 91.6% urban households vs. 83.3% rural households have Internet.

• Only 7.2% of households have fibre-optic connections; rural share only 3.2%.

First-Generation Digital Inclusion Reforms

• BharatNet Expansion: BharatNet connected over 1.7 lakh Gram Panchayats with optical fibre, enabling digital services in remote villages. It became the backbone for e-governance, e-health, and online education in rural areas.

Digital India Framework: The Digital India Mission aimed at universal access through CSCs, digital lockers, and online government services.

• PMGDISHA Literacy Drive: Pradhan Mantri Gramin Digital Saksharta Abhiyan aimed to train 6 crore rural individuals in basic digital skills.

UPI and JAM Trinity: The Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile linkage and UPI enabled low-cost, real-time digital payments.

Outcomes of First-Gen Reforms:

Universal Mobile Usage: About 97% of youth now use mobile phones for calls and internet, including 92.7% in rural areas. This marks a near-saturation of basic digital access across India.

• UPI’s Dominance in Payments: UPI usage among youth touched 80.7%, while Net banking remained low at 0.7%. This shows India’s fintech adoption is mobile-first and mass-based.

Mobile-Centric Internet: Smartphones with cheap data packs made mobile internet the primary access tool in rural India. Desktop or broadband-based access remains limited.

Rise in Female Internet Users: Female internet usage in rural India rose from 77.1% to 91.3%, indicating a major shift in gender access. This reflects a quiet digital empowerment underway.

Persistent Shortcomings in Digital Divide:

Gender Gap in Ownership: Only 56.9% of rural young women own mobile phones, compared to 81.2% of men. Access without ownership limits autonomy and private use.

Lack of Productive Skills: Just 32.2% of youth created a digital presentation, only 22.9% drafted a document. Digital use is skewed towards consumption, not creation.

Dependence on Male Relatives: Women often rely on family phones, leading to restricted use and compromised privacy. This dependence hinders empowerment and equal participation.

Low Civic Tech Awareness: Only 26.9% of youth know how to file cybercrime complaints; rural and female awareness is below 22%. This limits their ability to seek redress online.

Weak Financial Fluency: Just 18.8% of youth use both UPI and Net banking. Multimodal digital banking literacy remains underdeveloped, especially in rural areas.

Way Forward: Second-Generation Inclusion

From Access to Empowerment: Focus must shift from access to enabling youth to use digital tools creatively and productively. This includes skill-building, problem-solving, and content creation.

Women-Centric Interventions: Train SHGs and rural women to use mobile apps for business, education, and healthcare. Digital tools must serve as income and knowledge multipliers.

Last-Mile Infrastructure Push: Strengthen fibre-to-village networks and set up school-based and panchayat-level digital hubs. Public Wi-Fi and community centres can support access.

Digital in School Curricula: ICT training, document creation, presentations, and cyber hygiene must be taught in schools. It will ensure productive engagement from an early age.

Expand Digital Financial Skills: Train women and rural youth in using Net banking, UPI, and secure wallets. Financial fluency beyond UPI is crucial for true participation.

Localized Awareness Campaigns: Use local languages to promote internet use for health, e-learning, job search, and governance. Content should match rural needs and cultural context.

Conclusion:

India has achieved near-universal digital access, but meaningful use remains unequal. A second-generation push must focus on ownership, skills, and autonomy to truly bridge the divide. A mobile phone in every hand must also mean equal power in every mind.

• What is the status of digitalization in the Indian economy? Examine the problems faced in this regard and suggest improvements. (2023)

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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