The Asian Age

Aadhaar has helped govt save $ 9bn, claims Nandan Nilekani

- LALIT K. JHA

The Indian government’s Aadhaar card scheme, which has enrolled more than 1 billion people, has helped the exchequer save about $ 9 billion by eliminatin­g fraud in beneficiar­y lists, its architect Nandan Nilekani has said here.

The system, launched by the previous UPA government, has been “enthusiast­ically” supported by the current government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and finance minister Arun Jaitley, said the 62year- old non- executive chairman of Infosys — India’s second largest software services firm.

It has really been a bipartisan thing, Nilekani said while participat­ing in a World Bank panel discussion on Digital Economy for Developmen­t on Thursday.

He said that it is easier for the developing countries to leapfrog by building a right digital infrastruc­ture.

Aadhaar now has more than a billion people registered on its system, he said.

“It has also saved the government about $ 9 billion in fraud and wastage because by having that unique number you eliminate fakes and duplicates from your beneficiar­y and employee list,” Mr Nilekani said at the event on the sidelines of the annual meeting of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) and the World Bank.

“We have about half a billion people who have connected their ID directly to a bank account. The government has transferre­d about $ 12 billion into bank accounts electronic­ally in real time to the world’s largest cash transfer system. There are many many things like that, he said.

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Nandan Nilekani

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