Business Standard

India’s road to becoming a $1-trillion digital economy is full of hurdles

The country needs to make the right policies to support new-age technologi­es

- KIRAN RATHEE

Even as the electronic­s and IT ministry has set an ambitious target of making India a $1-trillion digital economy in the coming five to seven years, it is not going to be a cakewalk, especially as a profitable business model is yet to be developed for new-age technologi­es and emerging digital ecosystems.

According to experts, achieving the $1-trillion digital economy tag is not a certainty and the government needs to make the right policies and further execute them properly if it wants to move towards that goal. Without any such commitment and faster execution, India could only achieve an economic value of digital technologi­es to the tune of $500 billion or $600 billion in the next 5-7 years.

India’s digital and IT industry, in its current form, is primarily driven by the IT and IT-enabled services and is estimated to stand at $150 billion, followed by financial services at $50 billion and electronic­s manufactur­ing at $40 billion. However, going forward, the focus will be on start-ups, financial technology and new-age technologi­es like Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI), internet of things (IoT), digital payments, digital education and e-healthcare.

But people tracking the digital sector feel that the country is at a nascent stage in developing a profitable business model for digital themes like e-education, e-healthcare, digital financial systems or cyber security. Also, there is no regulatory

environmen­t for such digital ecosystems. “The government needs to build a collaborat­ive business model with the private sector in order to get investment­s, as well as innovation in such fields,” an expert said.

The government also knows the challenges, and is collaborat­ing with the private sector to understand the needs and what could be the supporting policies. Electronic­s & IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad had undertaken a few meetings with IT honchos regarding the issue. The ministry had also roped in McKinsey & Co to prepare a road map for increasing the pace of digital services in the country. Official sources say that McKinsey has already submitted the report to the ministry, which is studying it. Government think tank NITI Aayog will also work with state government­s to evaluate the preparedne­ss for digital services.

The ministry had identified digital payments, Make in India, Start-Up India, Skill India, 100 Smart Cities, 50 Metro Projects and Swachh Bharat as the key drivers of the digital economy.

It was also projected that the digital economy would generate 30 million jobs by 2024-25 – double the current level.

The electronic­s, telecom and IT/ITeS sectors would be the top three contributo­rs, with 8.9 million, 8.8 million and 6.5 million jobs, respective­ly. These would be followed by e-commerce, with 6 million, cyber security (2.5 million), sharing economy (2.3 million), common service centres (2 million) and start-ups and IoT (0.5 million). Ecommerce is set to grow 19 times over in generating employment, followed by start-ups and the IoT sector, which are expected to see 5-fold increase in employment creation.

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