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Safeguarding India’s Digital Economy

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Economy

Source: TH

Context: The Indian digital economy is in the spotlight after a sharp rise in sophisticated cyber frauds such as phishing, UPI/OTP scams, identity theft, and digital arrests.

About Safeguarding India’s Digital Economy:

Cybercrime Landscape in India

Scale of problem: Over 13.9 lakh cybercrime cases were reported in India in 2023 (NCRB), but experts estimate many go unreported due to stigma or distrust in institutions. Eg: In 2025, a 78-year-old banker lost ₹23 crore through a “digital arrest” scam.

Eg: In 2025, a 78-year-old banker lost ₹23 crore through a “digital arrest” scam.

Tactics used: Social engineering is at the core—fear, greed, urgency—exploited via phishing, OTP/UPI frauds, loan/job scams, remote access malware, and fake government impersonations.

Weakest links: Elderly and rural citizens: digitally illiterate yet financially vulnerable. Banks: often issue generic advisories, fail to detect abnormal transactions, and allow mule accounts with weak KYC. Cyber police: lack manpower, training, and AI-driven tools, reducing their effectiveness.

Elderly and rural citizens: digitally illiterate yet financially vulnerable.

Banks: often issue generic advisories, fail to detect abnormal transactions, and allow mule accounts with weak KYC.

Cyber police: lack manpower, training, and AI-driven tools, reducing their effectiveness.

Constitutional and Institutional Dimensions:

Right to Privacy (Justice K.S. Puttaswamy vs Union of India, 2017): Citizens’ personal and financial data must be protected as a fundamental right under Article 21.

Article 300A: Protects property; digital financial frauds threaten citizens’ legitimate wealth.

RBI Regulations: Banks are mandated to provide zero liability protection for victims in certain categories of digital fraud.

CERT-In: Nodal agency under the IT Act for cybersecurity incidents, but lacks proactive capacity for retail-level fraud detection.

Threats to India’s Digital Economy:

Social Engineering Fraud: Exploiting fear, urgency, and trust through phishing, OTP/UPI scams, job/loan frauds, and fake government impersonation. Eg: “Digital arrest” scam siphoned ₹23 crore from a retired banker in 2025.

• Eg: “Digital arrest” scam siphoned ₹23 crore from a retired banker in 2025.

Identity Theft & Data Breach: Misuse of Aadhaar, PAN, or bank details due to data leaks and poor encryption safeguards.

Mule Accounts & Money Laundering: Weak KYC enables mule accounts, which are used for layering and dispersal of funds, making recovery difficult.

Institutional Negligence: Banks fail to monitor abnormal high-value transactions; cyber police remain under-equipped in manpower and technology.

Cross-Border Scams: Fraud networks operate internationally, exploiting jurisdictional loopholes and weak cooperation frameworks.

Initiatives Taken So Far:

Regulatory Safeguards: RBI’s zero liability policy for certain categories of fraud. Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 for secure handling of personal data.

• RBI’s zero liability policy for certain categories of fraud.

• Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 for secure handling of personal data.

Institutional Mechanisms: CERT-In for cybersecurity incident reporting. Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) for inter-agency coordination.

• CERT-In for cybersecurity incident reporting.

• Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) for inter-agency coordination.

Awareness Campaigns: RBI’s Cyber Jagrookta Abhiyan and RBI Kehta Hai campaigns to spread digital literacy.

Technological Steps: Some banks adopting AI-based anomaly detection. National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal for grievance redressal.

• Some banks adopting AI-based anomaly detection.

• National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal for grievance redressal.

Recommended Measures:

Technology & AI Integration: Deploy AI/ML for real-time anomaly detection, personalised transaction profiling, and blockchain for tamper-proof KYC.

Strengthen Cyber Police: Establish 24/7 cyber rapid response units, expand forensic labs, and train workforce in global best practices.

Bank Accountability: Strictly enforce KYC compliance, penalise banks failing to freeze mule accounts, and mandate real-time fraud alerts.

Cross-Institutional Cooperation: Build a National Fraud Intelligence Grid linking banks, telecoms, and enforcement agencies.

Citizen Empowerment: Launch targeted digital literacy drives for senior citizens, rural communities, and students to counter social engineering.

Global Coordination: Enhance Interpol, FATF, and bilateral cyber treaties for tracking international fraud networks.

Conclusion:

Safeguarding India’s digital economy demands a shift from reactive redressal to proactive prevention through AI-driven monitoring and stronger bank accountability. Empowered cyber police and digitally literate citizens are vital to counter evolving fraud tactics. Only by combining technology, institutions, and trust can India build a truly resilient digital economy.

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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