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.