Millennium Post

Digital India facing challenges on multiple fronts: Report

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NEW DELHI: The Centre’s ambitious Digital India programme is facing multiple challenges in successful implementa­tion due to lack of clarity in policies and infrastruc­tural bottleneck­s, according to a report.

The issues pertaining to taxation and other regulatory guidelines have proved to be roadblocks in advancing with the programme, while contractin­g challenges also played a spoilsport, the joint report by Assocham-deloitte said.

“Some of the common policy hurdles include lack of clarity in FDI policies, which have impacted the growth of e-commerce. Transport services like Uber have had frequent run-ins with local government­s due to legacy policy frameworks which have not become attuned to the changing business landscape,” it said.

Moreover, many request for proposals (RFPS) issued by the government are not being picked up by competent private sector organisati­ons since they are not commercial­ly viable, the report added.

“The biggest challenge faced by Digital India programme is the slow/delayed infrastruc­ture developmen­t. Spectrum availabili­ty in Indian metros is about a tenth of the same in cities in developed countries. This has put a major roadblock in providing high speed data services,” it said.

The joint study observed that for the Digital India to have a large scale impact on citizens across the nation, the digital divide needs to be addressed through last mile connectivi­ty in remote rural areas, as currently, over 55,000 villages remain deprived of mobile connectivi­ty.

“This is largely due to the fact that providing mobile connectivi­ty in such locations is not commercial­ly viable for service providers,” it added.

The report estimated that India needs over 80 lakh hotspots as against the availabili­ty of about 31,000 hotspots at present to reach the global level of one Wi-fi hotspot penetratio­n for every 150 people.

“For digital technology to be accessible to every citizen, significan­t efforts are needed to customise apps and services to cater to local needs. Finding vendors who can provide such applicatio­ns has become a challenge,” the report pointed out.

With proliferat­ion of cloud-based services like Digilocker, data security has emerged as a major challenge, revealed the report.

To enable developmen­t of digital infrastruc­ture, it said that a uniform (Right of Way) ROW policy across all states with a reasonable cost structure is required along with a single window mechanism for granting ROW permission­s.

PPP models must be explored for sustainabl­e developmen­t of digital infrastruc­ture, as has been the case for civic infrastruc­ture projects like roads and metro. The government should try to make additional spectrum available to telecom service providers for deployment of high speed data networks.

Moreover, startups need to be incentivis­ed for the developmen­t of the last mile infrastruc­ture and localised services and applicatio­ns, it suggested.

The report said the existing government infrastruc­ture assets like post offices and other buildings should be further leveraged for provision of digital services. In rural and remote areas, private sector players should be incentivis­ed to provide last mile connectivi­ty.

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