PIB Summaries 29 April 2026

  1. DPI@2047
  2. 50th Statehood celebrations of Sikkim


  • NITI Aayog launched the DPI@2047 roadmap, aiming to leverage Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) for inclusive, productivity-led, non-linear growth towards Viksit Bharat 2047.

Relevance

  • GS Paper II (Governance)
    • Digital governance, service delivery reforms, role of NITI Aayog
  • GS Paper III (Economy)
    • Productivity-led growth, MSMEs formalisation, digital economy, financial inclusion

Practice Question

Q. Digital Public Infrastructure is evolving from a welfare-delivery tool to a productivity-enhancing growth model. Examine the significance of DPI@2047 in achieving inclusive and sustainable economic development in India. (250 words)

  • DPI refers to open, interoperable digital systems enabling identity, payments, and data exchange, including Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker, forming backbone of India’s digital governance architecture.
  • DPI 1.0 enabled financial inclusion, DBT efficiency, and governance transformation, positioning India as a global leader in population-scale digital public goods deployment.
  • During G20 Presidency, India promoted DPI as a global development model, especially for Global South, emphasising scalability, affordability, and inclusivity.
  • NITI Aayog is the Government of Indias premier policy think tank, established in 2015 replacing the Planning Commission to promote cooperative federalism and strategic policymaking.
  • It functions as a platform for CentreState coordination, involving Chief Ministers and Lt. Governors, ensuring bottom-up planning and state participation in national development priorities.
  • Focuses on long-term policy vision, innovation, and outcome-based governance, through initiatives like Aspirational Districts Programme, SDG Index, and DPI roadmap.
  • Introduces two-phase roadmap: DPI 2.0 (2025–2035) focusing on livelihood-led growth, followed by DPI 3.0 (2035–2047) enabling broad-based prosperity.
  • Marks transition from digital access productivity, capability, and opportunity creation, expanding scope beyond welfare delivery to economic transformation.
  • Focuses on digital rails architecture, enabling interoperability, cross-sector innovation, and faster diffusion of technologies like AI at population scale.
  • Identifies eight sectoral transformations covering MSMEs, agriculture, health, education, credit systems, decentralised energy, and welfare delivery ecosystems.
  • Addresses structural constraints like low productivity, credit access barriers, fragmented markets, and limited digital penetration in informal sectors.
  • Anchors implementation at district level, ensuring local adaptability, contextual solutions, and stronger last-mile governance outcomes.
  • District-led demand aggregation ensures solutions reflect ground realities, improving policy responsiveness and citizen-centric service delivery mechanisms.
  • Scaling technology entrepreneurship enables startup-driven innovation ecosystems, fostering customised digital solutions across sectors and geographies.
  • AI integration across sectors enhances predictive governance, operational efficiency, and productivity gains in agriculture, health, and MSMEs.
  • Data-driven governance systems improve decision-making, service targeting, and inter-sector coordination through interoperable digital platforms.
  • Shifts focus from GDP growth productivity enhancement, linking growth to efficiency, innovation, and higher quality employment generation.
  • Enables MSMEs and informal sector integration into formal economy, improving credit access, market linkage, and participation in global value chains.
  • Reduces transaction costs, logistics inefficiencies, and information asymmetry, strengthening competitiveness and export potential.
  • Enhances real-time governance capacity through data analytics, monitoring systems, and targeted welfare delivery mechanisms.
  • Promotes cooperative federalism, empowering states and districts as drivers of digital transformation and economic growth strategies.
  • Builds integrated governance architecture, reducing duplication, improving coordination, and enhancing administrative efficiency across departments.
  • Expands digital inclusion to marginalised groups, ensuring access to health, education, finance, and welfare services in rural and underserved areas.
  • Creates new livelihood opportunities via digital entrepreneurship, skilling, and platform-based employment ecosystems.
  • Promotes vernacular digital ecosystems, reducing language barriers and enabling wider participation in digital economy.
  • Integrates AI with DPI, enabling large-scale deployment of advanced technologies across governance, economy, and public services.
  • Promotes democratisation of AI, ensuring access for startups, MSMEs, and citizens, preventing concentration of digital power.
  • Encourages open, interoperable systems, fostering innovation, competition, and ecosystem-driven technology development.
  • Positions India as a global leader in Digital Public Infrastructure, offering an inclusive alternative to proprietary digital ecosystems dominated by Big Tech.
  • Strengthens digital sovereignty and strategic autonomy, reducing dependence on foreign platforms and technologies.
  • Enables India to shape global digital governance frameworks, especially for developing economies and Global South partnerships.
  • Data privacy and cybersecurity concerns remain significant, requiring robust safeguards against breaches, misuse, and surveillance risks.
  • Persistent digital divide across gender, region, and socio-economic groups may limit equitable benefits from DPI expansion.
  • Institutional capacity gaps at local levels may hinder effective implementation, coordination, and scaling of digital initiatives.
  • Risks of algorithmic bias and exclusion in AI systems could reinforce inequalities and affect vulnerable populations disproportionately.
  • Strengthen data protection frameworks and cybersecurity architecture, ensuring trust, accountability, and resilience in digital systems.
  • Invest in digital infrastructure, connectivity, and skilling, bridging gaps across regions and socio-economic groups.
  • Promote public-private partnerships to scale innovation and ensure ecosystem-driven growth across sectors.
  • Develop ethical AI governance frameworks, ensuring transparency, fairness, and inclusivity in AI deployment.
  • Expand international cooperation, positioning India’s DPI as a global digital public good model.
  • DPI components: Aadhaar (identity), UPI (payments), DigiLocker (data/document storage).
  • DPI@2047 roadmap phases: DPI 2.0 (2025–2035) and DPI 3.0 (2035–2047).
  • Focus areas include AI integration, district-level implementation, and productivity-led growth model.


  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted Sikkims 50th Statehood celebrations, emphasising its sustainable model, strategic geography, and cultural diversity in Northeast India.

Relevance

  • GS Paper I (Geography)
    • Himalayan geography, biodiversity hotspot, river systems (Teesta basin)
  • GS Paper II (Polity)
    • State reorganisation, integration via 36th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1975

Practice Question  

Q. Sikkim represents a model of sustainable development and strategic significance in the Himalayan region. Discuss its ecological, economic, and geopolitical importance. (250 words)

  • Sikkim became India’s 22nd State in 1975 through the 36th Constitutional Amendment Act, ending monarchy and integrating into Indian Union.
  • Earlier a protectorate under India (1950 Treaty), Sikkim’s accession reflects peaceful democratic integration of a Himalayan border region.
  • Sikkim is bordered by China (Tibet) in the north and northeast, Bhutan in the east, Nepal in the west, and West Bengal in the south.
  • Located in the Eastern Himalayas, characterised by steep terrain, high seismicity, fragile ecology, and altitudinal variation from ~300 m to >8,500 m.
  • Home to Kangchenjunga, India’s highest peak and world’s third highest, a sacred mountain for local communities.
  • Major rivers include Teesta River and its tributary Rangeet River, forming key drainage system and hydropower potential.
  • Contains important mountain passes like Nathu La and Jelep La, facilitating India-China trade and strategic connectivity.
  • Sikkim is India’s first fully organic state (2016), reflecting policy-led transition to sustainable agriculture and ecological governance.
  • Promotes eco-wellness tourism, integrating natural landscapes, biodiversity conservation, and economic development.
  • Focus on sports, youth development, and human capital formation strengthens inclusive and participatory governance.
  • Economy driven by tourism, organic agriculture, and hydropower potential, ensuring diversified livelihood opportunities.
  • Organic farming enhances export competitiveness of niche products, boosting farmer incomes and branding Sikkim globally.
  • Strategic investments in connectivity and infrastructure integrate Sikkim with national and regional markets.
  • Multi-ethnic society comprising Lepcha, Bhutia, and Nepali communities, representing Indias cultural pluralism and social harmony.
  • Celebrations reinforce Ek Bharat, Shreshtha Bharat, promoting national integration through cultural exchange.
  • High literacy and social indicators reflect effective governance in small Himalayan states.
  • Part of Eastern Himalayan biodiversity hotspot, rich in endemic flora and fauna, crucial for ecological balance and conservation efforts.
  • Sustainable practices align with climate-resilient development and LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment) initiative.
  • Glacial systems and rivers contribute to water security for downstream regions including West Bengal and Bangladesh.
  • Proximity to China border and Doklam plateau makes Sikkim critical for Indias defence and border management strategy.
  • Located near Siliguri Corridor, ensuring connectivity between mainland India and Northeast, making it geopolitically vital.
  • Mountain passes like Nathu La enhance strategic trade and military mobility in Eastern Himalayas.
  • Fragile Himalayan ecosystem prone to landslides, earthquakes, and climate change impacts such as glacial retreat.
  • Over-dependence on tourism risks ecological degradation and infrastructure stress.
  • Limited industrial base and connectivity challenges due to difficult terrain.
  • Promote sustainable tourism with carrying capacity regulation and community participation models.
  • Strengthen climate-resilient infrastructure and disaster preparedness systems in Himalayan regions.
  • Enhance cross-border trade via Nathu La while ensuring security safeguards.
  • Expand organic value chains, branding, and exports to improve rural incomes.
  • Sikkim borders China, Bhutan, Nepal, West Bengal.
  • Kangchenjunga is India’s highest peak located in Sikkim.
  • Major rivers: Teesta and Rangeet.
  • Important passes: Nathu La, Jelep La.

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