Key facts

  • Digital India was launched on 1 July 2015 around digital infrastructure, services on demand, and citizen empowerment.
  • The National e-Governance Plan approved on 18 May 2006 created the administrative base later consolidated under Digital India.
  • The Aadhaar authority was set up on 28 January 2009, while the first Aadhaar number was issued on 29 September 2010.
  • UPI was launched by NPCI on 11 April 2016 and uses virtual payment addresses for interoperable digital payments.
  • BharatNet began as the National Optical Fibre Network in October 2011 and was renamed in April 2015.

Key Points at a Glance

  1. 1

    Digital India was launched on 1 July 2015 around digital infrastructure, services on demand, and citizen empowerment.

  2. 2

    The National e-Governance Plan approved on 18 May 2006 created the administrative base later consolidated under Digital India.

  3. 3

    India Stack is a layered digital public infrastructure built around identity, payments, documents, and data empowerment.

  4. 4

    The Aadhaar authority was set up on 28 January 2009, while the first Aadhaar number was issued on 29 September 2010.

  5. 5

    UPI was launched by NPCI on 11 April 2016 and uses virtual payment addresses for interoperable digital payments.

  6. 6

    BharatNet began as the National Optical Fibre Network in October 2011 and was renamed in April 2015.

  7. 7

    PARAM 8000 in 1991 marked India's first indigenous supercomputer in the C-DAC lineage.

  8. 8

    The Information Technology Act, 2000 gave legal recognition to electronic records, digital signatures, electronic contracts, and e-filing.

How did Digital India consolidate India's e-governance architecture?

Digital India consolidated India's e-governance architecture by bringing connectivity, service delivery, and citizen capability under a single national programme launched on 1 July 2015. The MeitY Annual Report 2017-18 identifies nine pillars under the Digital India Programme.

Programme frame

  • Aim: The Union government introduced the programme with the stated aim of turning India into a digitally empowered society and knowledge economy.
  • Three pillars:
    • digital infrastructure as a utility to every citizen
    • governance and services on demand
    • digital empowerment of citizens
  • Why the pillars matter: They connect connectivity, service delivery, and citizen capability in one policy frame instead of treating them as separate schemes.
  • Nodal ministry: The nodal ministry today is MeitY.
  • Institutional anchor: By 2016, the earlier Department of Electronics and Information Technology, or DeitY, had been upgraded into the full ministry that steers Digital India, giving the programme a clearer institutional anchor across ministries and states.

e-Governance lineage

  • National e-Governance Plan: Digital India's institutional ancestry lies in the National e-Governance Plan approved on 18 May 2006, the NeGP|National e-Governance backbone for later integration.
  • Mission Mode Projects: NeGP brought together Mission Mode Projects in a common implementation structure, and later programme documents described the architecture as 31 Mission Mode Projects.
  • Coverage: The list covered citizen-facing services and backbone systems such as income tax administration, passports, e-District, Common Service Centres, and State Wide Area Networks.
  • Administrative foundation: In practice, NeGP created the service counters, workflow digitisation, and state-level connectivity that Digital India later reorganised under a more visible umbrella.
  • Reading for exams: NeGP is best read as the administrative foundation, while Digital India is the political and programmatic expansion of the same e-governance trajectory.

Citizen-service stack

Launch / building block Date / status Role
MyGov 26 July 2014 Government's participatory platform for citizen engagement
DigiLocker 1 July 2015 Secure cloud repository for authentic digital documents under MeitY, launched alongside the Digital India moment
e-Sign, e-Pramaan and e-Hospital Building blocks Reduced the need for paper handling, physical signatures, or repeated in-person verification
UMANG 23 November 2017 Expanded the mobile front end by bringing government services onto a single application instead of forcing citizens to navigate department-specific portals
Common Service Centres network By 2024, crossed 5 lakh access points Gave villages and small towns a last-mile assisted interface for services that otherwise remain device- or literacy-dependent

PMGDISHA literacy arm

  • Approval: PMGDISHA was approved by the Union Cabinet on 8 February 2017.
  • Target: Digital literacy for one person in each of 6 crore rural households by March 2019.
  • Implementing backbone: CSC e-Governance Services India Limited became the implementing backbone for delivery on the ground.
  • Extension: The programme was extended beyond its original deadline, showing that digital inclusion required sustained institutional support rather than a one-time campaign.
  • Ecosystem link: It linked household-level digital familiarity with the wider ecosystem of online certificates, mobile apps, authentication services, and cashless transactions.
  • BharatNet link: BharatNet, discussed separately in section 3, supplied the broadband logic underneath this inclusion agenda and helped explain why access and literacy had to advance together.

Rajasthan bridge

  • State mirror: Rajasthan built a state mirror through the Department of Information Technology and Communication, the e-Mitra platform, RISL, Rajasthan SWAN, and state data-centre infrastructure, forming the Rajasthan|e-Mitra|DoIT bridge that mirrors national design at the state level.
  • Existing spine: e-Mitra had already been functioning from the 2002 era onward, so the state entered Digital India with an existing service-delivery spine rather than a blank slate.
  • RISL role: Official Rajasthan project documents describe RISL as the implementation agency for e-governance projects such as e-Mitra.
  • Service scale: More than 450 citizen and business services are delivered through the platform across rural and urban areas.
  • Key bridge for Rajasthan aspirants: Digital India explains the national umbrella, while e-Mitra and the state IT department show how that umbrella is operationalised in Rajasthan.

Predicted RAS Questions

Based on PYQ trends and 2026 syllabus analysis

1 MCQ Which set correctly states the three declared goals of the umbrella programme launched on 1 July 2015?
  1. A Digital infrastructure as a utility, services on demand, digital empowerment of citizens Correct answer
  2. B Digital manufacturing, startup financing, cyber policing
  3. C Skill training, domestic manufacturing, citizen feedback portal
  4. D Digital infrastructure as a utility, services on demand, MyGov as the fourth pillar

Explanation

Option A is correct because Digital India was launched on 1 July 2015 with three explicitly stated pillars: digital infrastructure as a utility to every citizen, governance and services on demand, and digital empowerment of citizens. These pillars define the programme's architecture and are repeatedly used in official launch material. Option D looks attractive because MyGov is a prominent citizen-facing platform, but it is an associated platform, not a pillar of Digital India. Options B and C borrow language from broader technology and development policy, yet neither matches the officially declared three-part structure.