[The statement was not, analysts
said, needlessly overwrought. India has lagged behind much of the
world in digital infrastructure. It ranked 115th on its average connection
speed in the first quarter of this year, according to a study by Akamai
Technologies. Just over 100 million subscribers, in a population of more than
1.2 billion, have broadband connections, data in April from a government
regulatory body showed.]
Prime Minister Narendra Modi of
imports of electronics by 2020. Credit Saurabh Das/Associated Press
|
With an analogy, he evoked the image of a small child, once
enthralled with a pen, or a pair of glasses in an adult’s pocket, now
captivated by a mobile phone.
“That means that he may or may not understand anything else, but
he can understand digital power,” he said on Wednesday. “Time demands that we
understand this change, and if we don’t understand this change, then we will be
left in a corner and the world will move far away and we will be left
watching.”
The statement was not, analysts
said, needlessly overwrought. India has lagged behind much of the
world in digital infrastructure. It ranked 115th on its average connection
speed in the first quarter of this year, according to a study by Akamai
Technologies. Just over 100 million subscribers, in a population of more than
1.2 billion, have broadband connections, data in April from a government
regulatory body showed.
The problem lies partly in the slow progress of a project
started in 2011 to expand the country’s fiber optic network.
But India also represents great
opportunity in the digital economy because of its bulging population and a
fast-growing market for electronic goods. Mr. Modi noted that imports of electronic
goods were second only to oil.
“Why can’t we make quality electronic goods that are globally
competitive?” he asked.
Mr. Modi underscored his government’s aim to substantially cut
his country’s imports of electronics by 2020, an ambitious goal for an India that, according to Neeraj
Aggarwal, a senior partner and director at the Boston Consulting Group in India , is “almost not a player in
this space.”
In addition, the Digital India campaign includes a commitment to
providing citizens with access to health care, education, banking, insurance,
pension and agricultural services through a network of “common service centers”
that are supposed to be open in 250,000 villages across the country by 2019.
“In a sense it’s what we’ve been waiting for,” said Nikhil
Pahwa, the founder and editor of MediaNama.com,
which analyzes India ’s digital economy. “No
government till now had made a strong, concerted effort on focusing on
digitizing India .”
Industrialists at the announcement, including Mukesh Ambani, the
chairman of Reliance Industries, and the leaders of some of India ’s largest outsourcing
companies, pledged nearly $71 billion to realize the government’s goals.
The event on Wednesday was a
statement of intent more than a detailed policy brief, and the path to the
goals the government described is not easy.
While Mr. Modi spoke of empowering young people to build
start-ups and innovate, Mr. Pahwa complained of byzantine regulations for
technology companies. He cited the government’s efforts to regulate Uber, the
American ride-hailing company.
Entrepreneurs complain that online payments in India have also been hamstrung by a
series of measures.
Some expressed skepticism that
the government could keep its promises.
“The Internet in India has grown despite government
policy, not because of government policy,” said Mr. Pahwa, who also worked on a
campaign in India for net
neutrality, a concept that all data should be treated equally.
But Mr. Aggarwal, of the Boston Consulting Group, said the
expansion of infrastructure and services could have the potential to pull in a
huge base of consumers.
“It creates an enabling infrastructure, and a lot of private
sector innovation can ride on top of that,” he said.
As for the manufacturing of electronics, India faces tough competition from China , which has incentives for
foreign companies and a well-established manufacturing structure.
In India , cumbersome land and taxation
laws have the potential to scare off global companies. But a surge in the
Indian market for electronics could provide India with the boost it needs, if
coupled with swift policy action, Mr. Aggarwal said.
“This is a window of opportunity that, if lost now, will be
harder to recover,” he said.
Swati
Gupta contributed reporting.