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India’s Digital Journey: Governance, Growth, and Groundbreaking Reform

The author recounts how India’s digital decade touched everyday lives—from farmers and students to entrepreneurs—reshaping governance, commerce, and opportunity, while opening new frontiers for an inclusive digital future.

JP Gupta by JP Gupta
September 15, 2025
in Digital, My View
India’s Digital Journey: Governance, Growth, and Groundbreaking Reform
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By Rao Inderjit Singh

Over the past decade, India has witnessed a digital revolution that is nothing short of extraordinary. What began as a series of targeted technological interventions has now evolved into a sweeping transformation, touching nearly every aspect of Indian life—economy, governance, education, healthcare, commerce, and even the livelihoods of farmers and small entrepreneurs in the remotest corners of the country.

This journey has not been accidental. It has been carefully stewarded by the Government of India through bold policymaking, cross-ministerial collaboration, and a commitment to inclusive growth. While line ministries such as the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), the Ministry of Finance (MoF), the Ministry of Agriculture, and others have executed large-scale projects on the ground, NITI Aayog has served as the policy engine—fostering convergence, driving thought leadership, and nudging the system toward scalable, citizen-first innovations.

A major inflection point came with the rollout of the Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile (JAM) trinity. With over 55 crore bank accounts opened, millions who were previously excluded from the financial system suddenly gained access to banking and direct benefit transfers. In a small village in Odisha, a single mother was able to receive welfare benefits directly into her bank account, bypassing middlemen for the first time. Her story is echoed by millions across India. This massive financial inclusion movement, supported by the Ministry of Finance and enabled by Aadhaar and mobile penetration, laid the groundwork for what came next: a fintech explosion.

The Unified Payments Interface (UPI), developed by the National Payments Corporation of India under the guidance of the RBI, revolutionized the way Indians transacted. What began as a novel way to send money to a friend quickly became the lifeline of small businesses, vegetable vendors, and gig workers. Today, India records over 17 billion UPI transactions each month, and even roadside vegetable sellers accept digital payments with a simple QR code.

At the same time, the backbone of India’s digital infrastructure was being built—quietly and persistently—under MeitY. Projects like BharatNet brought broadband to over two lakh gram panchayats, while India Stack created the architecture for paperless, presence-less, and cashless services. DigiLocker allowed students to access their certificates digitally, and e-Sign enabled remote authentication for important documents. DigiYatra, a pioneering initiative, introduced seamless, paperless, and contactless air travel using facial recognition technology. It ensures faster check-ins, an enhanced passenger experience, and improved airport efficiency, all while safeguarding data privacy through decentralized identity management. This marks a major step toward making Indian aviation future-ready and passenger-centric. These weren’t just apps—they were building blocks of a digital republic.

Digital governance also took a leap forward with the launch of the Government e-Marketplace (GeM). Designed to bring transparency and efficiency into public procurement, GeM has connected over 1.6 lakh government buyers with more than 22 lakh sellers—including a growing number of women entrepreneurs and MSMEs. For a small handicraft seller from Rajasthan, this meant access to government contracts that were previously unimaginable.

The agriculture sector, often seen as resistant to change, also began embracing digital tools. Platforms like PM-Kisan ensured that income support reached farmers directly. e-NAM connected agricultural mandis across states, enabling farmers to get better prices for their produce. The digital Soil Health Card helped them understand what crops to grow and what nutrients to add to their land. In rural Jharkhand, CSCs (Common Service Centres) run by local entrepreneurs became digital lifelines—offering everything from telemedicine to banking and skilling programmes.

The pandemic was a stress test for India’s digital public infrastructure—and it passed with flying colours. With schools shut, platforms like DIKSHA and SWAYAM ensured that learning didn’t stop. Children in Ladakh and Kerala could access the same content, curated by teachers across India. Simultaneously, the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission took shape, allowing citizens to access their health records through a digital ID and creating a seamless experience across hospitals and states.

Commerce, too, witnessed a quiet revolution. The Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC), an initiative of DPIIT, is now enabling small kirana shops and handloom weavers to compete with large e-commerce giants. By unbundling the functions of digital commerce, ONDC is levelling the playing field, ensuring that small businesses can access logistics, payments, and customer feedback systems with ease.

The convergence role that NITI Aayog plays—bringing ministries, states, startups, and industry together—has ensured that digital public goods are interoperable, inclusive, and scalable. As India moves toward its $5 trillion economy goal, new frontiers are emerging: AI-enabled governance, decentralized commerce, and multilingual, mobile-first digital services that can reach the last person in the line.

But this is not just a government success story. It is the story of a nation—of millions of citizens who adopted change, entrepreneurs who built on digital rails, and local leaders who reimagined service delivery.

India’s digital decade is not just about technology—it is about transformation. And the story is only just beginning.

(Rao Inderjit Singh is Minister of State (Independent Charge) Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation; Planning and MoS Culture)
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