IANS | 16 Feb, 2024
India now ranks as the third largest digitalised country among the
G20 nations after US and China, when compared by the aggregate level of
digitalisation, a new report showed on Friday, stressing that India's
global ranking significantly improves when the full spectrum and scale
of digitalisation is taken into account.
Digitalisation has made dramatic progress but the way it is being measured globally has not.
Most
global indices do not completely capture the path of digitalisation
adopted by developing countries, according to the 'State of India's
Digital Economy (SIDE) 2024' report by the Indian Council for Research
on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) and the global consumer
internet group Prosus.
"The world does not still truly get how
technology has weaved itself into the daily life of Indians, which to
me, is the real digital economy. India is truly a digital native country
-- not just the young that are born to technology, but even the older
population take to technology," said Debjani Ghosh, President, Nasscom,
while releasing the report here.
"When you think of the digital economy of India, you should think in terms of the lens of impact and livelihoods," she added.
Using
a new approach called the CHIPS
(connect–harness–innovate–protect–sustain) framework, the report
benchmarked the scale and depth of India's digital transformation with
respect to G20 countries as well as for Indian states and UTs.
This
approach is better suited for developing countries like India as it
captures both the opportunities and risks created by digitalisation.
Unlike
global indices that focus entirely on the average user, it recognises
the scale of the network and breadth of use of technology at the
economy-wide level by proposing two separate indices -- one to measure
digitalisation at the economy-wide level and second at the user-level,
the report by ICRIER-Prosus Centre for Internet and Digital Economy
(IPCIDE) noted.
"There is a huge amount of work already done in
terms of innovation, government support, financial access and skills. As
an emerging economy India has truly leapfrogged into the digital age,"
said Pramod Bhasin, Chairperson, ICRIER.
India has the world's
second largest internet network with more than 700 million users. It has
also seen one of the fastest rollouts of 5G, after its launch in
October 2022.
During its G20 presidency, India was recognised as a
champion of using digital public infrastructures for large scale
delivery of public services. It has issued more than 1.3 billion
biometric IDs through the Aadhaar system.
More than 83 billion UPI
transactions took place in India in FY2022-23, the highest volume of
real-time digital payments for a country, followed by China and Brazil.
"By
highlighting the latest thinking on India's digital transformation and
presenting a new approach to measuring digitalisation, the SIDE report
can help Indian policymakers make informed decisions," said Sehraj
Singh, Managing Director, Prosus India.