India launches free Digital Public Infrastructure repository
Context: Recently, the Prime Minister of India announced the launch of two India-led initiatives: the Global Digital Public Infrastructure Repository and a Social Impact Fund
About Global Digital Public Infrastructure (GDPIR)
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It is a comprehensive resource hub, pooling essential lessons and expertise from G20 members and guest nations.
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Its primary aim is to bridge the knowledge gap in the choices and methodologies required for the design, construction, deployment, and governance of DPIs.
Digital public infrastructure (DPI)
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Set of shared digital systems - evolving concept
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Built and leveraged by both the public and private sectors, based on secure and resilient infrastructure
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The IT Ministry-developed repository serves as a "resource hub" for global DPI projects by various governments
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Current examples on the website include India's Aadhaar and DigiLocker, Singapore's National Digital Identity system, the European Union's Digital Identity Wallet, and more
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India's DPI push largely focused on how governments can use DPI to improve governance and service deliver
Social Impact Fund (SIF)
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The fund will financially support countries developing DPIs, providing "upstream technical and non-technical assistance".
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The platform allows other governments, international organisations, and philanthropies to contribute to the fund too.
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It is envisioned as a government-led, multistakeholder initiative to fast-track DPI implementation in the global south.
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This fund will offer financial support to provide upstream technical and non-technical assistance to countries in developing DPI systems.
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India has pledged an initial commitment of 25 million USD.
Significance of DPI
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Concept: Digital systems that provide large-scale services to society.
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Benefits: Empowers citizens, promotes digital inclusion, and improves service delivery.
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Indian Success: Praised globally for innovations like Aadhaar and UPI.
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UPI Transactions: Recorded 9 billion transactions worth Rs 14 lakh crore in May.
Global Response and Collaborations
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MOUs Signed: Eight countries collaborating with India on digital infrastructure.
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World Bank Praise: Recognized India’s achievement in financial inclusion through DPI.
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Financial Inclusion: India achieved 80% financial inclusion in 6 years, a process that could have taken 47 years without DPI.
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UPI and GDP: UPI transactions last year nearly 50% of India’s nominal GDP.
G20 Declaration on DPI
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Focus Areas: Safety, security, resilience, and trust in the digital economy.
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AI Governance: Promoting discussions on international governance for Artificial Intelligence.
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Human Rights and Privacy: Asserting DPI’s role in respecting human rights, data privacy, and intellectual property rights.
By: Shubham Tiwari ProfileResourcesReport error