💥Join UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (June Batch) + XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

e-governance, as a critical tool of governance, has ushered in effectiveness, transparency and accountability in governments. What inadequacies hamper the enhancement of these features?

The 2nd ARC’s 11th Report (2008) envisioned “SMART Governance”, Simple, Moral, Accountable, Responsive, and Transparent, through e-governance.

E-governance ushering in effectiveness

Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT)- saved more than

Unified Payments Interface (UPI) – Revolutionised digital payments with real-time, low-cost, interoperable transactions. Eg: 20+ billion transactions/month

Aadhaar-Based Authentication – Universal digital identity enables paperless, presence-less service delivery at scale.

DigiLocker – Digital storage of documents enables instant verification across services.

PM Gati Shakti – Inter-Ministerial Convergence

E-governance ushering in transparency

Open, competitive procurement on Government e-Marketplace (GeM) eliminates discretion and middlemen.

CoWIN Platform – Real-time vaccination tracking with public dashboards ensured transparent COVID response.

Online RTI Portal

Open Government Data Portal – data.gov.in publishes datasets across ministries for citizen scrutiny and research.

e-Procurement and e-Tendering – reduces corruption opportunities.

E-governance ushering in accountability

CPGRAMS Grievance Redressal – enables time-bound resolution and tracking by citizens.

MyGov – Direct policy participation through online consultations, polls, and feedback mechanisms.

Social Audit via MGNREGA – Online MIS publishes worksite details, wages, attendance

Aspirational Districts Dashboard – Real-time performance ranking of 112 districts on 49 indicators

Inadequacies hampering e-governance

Digital Divide – Eg: Rural internet penetration 59.06% vs urban 131.45% (TRAI Q1 2025).

Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities- Eg: cybercrime losses in 2024 – 206% rise (I4C, MHA 2025).

Data Privacy Concerns – Weak enforcement of data protection exposes citizens to misuse risks.

Poor Digital Literacy – Eg: Only 38% women have ever used internet (NFHS-5, MoHFW).

Inadequate Infrastructure – Internet connectivity, electricity, devices remain insufficient in remote regions.

Capacity Constraints – lower level government staff lack training in digital tools, data analytics, AI skills.

Targeting and verification errors exclude genuine beneficiaries from welfare schemes. Eg: PM-Kisan validation errors stranded 2.18 crore families (Dvara Research).

Departmental Silos – Ministries operate in isolation; lack integrated digital data ecosystems for governance.

Faulty validation processes. Eg: Aadhaar-PDS biometric failures linked to Simdega starvation death, Jharkhand (NHRC).

Linguistic Barriers – English-dominant interfaces exclude regional language users from accessing services.

Measures for Effective Implementation

Bridge Digital Divide – Saturate rural connectivity through BharatNet expansion and affordable smartphones distribution.

Mass Digital Literacy Drive – Scale PMGDISHA and Mission Karmayogi to all citizens and government employees.

Citizen Co-creation – Engage citizens through MyGov, hackathons, and pilot testing before scaling projects.

Outcome-Based Monitoring – Real-time dashboards, third-party audits, beneficiary feedback for course correction.

Adopt Global Best Practices – Estonia’s X-Road, Once-Only Principle for seamless inter-departmental data sharing.

For Viksit Bharat 2047, robust ICT governance demands inclusion, security, capacity, and citizen-centric design.