[Reader-list] News Items posted on the net on Multipurpose National Identity Cards-130

Taha Mehmood 2tahamehmood at googlemail.com
Wed Jun 17 16:46:46 IST 2009


Home Affairs Minister P. Chidambaram said the government has initiated
a scheme to provide multipurpose national identity cards (MNIC) to
every citizen by 2011.

PwC's Ratan said: "The unique ID (or MNIC) scheme can help the
government in targeting the right people for government programs and
subsidies." Today there is no one, uniform way of identifying an
individual in India.


http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,62055037,00.htm

India must focus on broadband, e-govt
By Swati Prasad, ZDNet Asia
Tuesday, June 16, 2009 03:16 PM

INDIA--With a new government in place, the country looks poised to
return to the high-growth trajectory, but only if the focus is on
e-government and technologies such as 3G and WiMax, say analysts.

"The quality of governance and the quality of services delivered by
the government are more important today than before," Neel Ratan,
executive director at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), told ZDNet Asia in
a phone interview.

Raju Bhatnagar, Nasscom's vice president of business process
outsourcing (BPO) and government relations, all sectors must
contribute to economic growth. "And IT can be a true facilitator in
this process," Bhatnagar said in a phone interview. Nasscom is India's
trade body and chamber of commerce for the country's IT-BPO industry.

According to the organization, the government needs to implement a
nation-wide skills development program and leverage IT expertise to
enable education and impart employable skills. "IT can facilitate
skills building at a national level, making people more employable,"
Bhatnagar said.

For instance, he said, technologies such as telepresence and
videoconferencing can be used to broadcast lectures given by
professors across India to overcome the scarcity of good teachers in
rural and semi-urban areas. "This will have a multiplier effect on the
economy," he added.

According to Diptarup Chakraborti, principal research analyst at
Gartner, IT enablement and PC penetration should also the priority.
India, unfortunately, lags several other Asian economies in terms of
both PC and Internet adoption, Chakraborti said in a phone interview.

"Internet has been around for nearly 15 years in India. Yet, our
internet population is only around 60 million in a population of 1.1
billion," he said. Also, India needs to redefine broadband, which the
country currently classifies as Internet speeds of 256Kbps, he said.

Broadband, 3G to be facilitators
In addition, there have been inordinate delays in the auction of 3G
and broadband wireless access (BWA) spectrum, owing to various
differences of opinion among ministers including the base price for
auctions and number of licenses to be awarded.

Industry analysts urge 3G and broadband to be given immediate
attention. "These would provide the basis for other implementations
like e-government," Deepak Kumar, IDC's general manager of
communications research, told ZDNet Asia in an e-mail interview. With
3G, mobile users will get be able to access the Internet at speeds of
7.2Mbps.

However, Ratan said broadband and 3G are not prerequisites for
e-government services. "While it's good to have government services
over broadband, the government is already setting up community service
centers (CSCs) across the country. These will serve as delivery
channels for e-government services in rural areas," he said, adding
that the government is setting up 100,000 CSCs across India.

Kumar though noted that 3G, WiMax, Digital Subscriber Line (xDSL),
Metro Ethernet and other such rollouts, would provide India's economy
with the necessary infrastructure and direct impetus to various
knowledge and service sectors. "Even sectors like manufacturing and
banking and financial services (BFSI), stand to benefit immensely from
these technologies, given the increasingly distributed and
multi-location character of such enterprises," he said.

"It would also be worth initiating processes for the formulation of,
say, a 4G policy, given that such policies have taken much time to
construct in the past," he added. "In fact, government itself can
consider adopting new paradigms like unified communication, enterprise
mobility, cloud computing, and so on, on a wider scale, to see how
these technologies would act as catalysts to the growth of the Indian
economy," Kumar said.

E-govt will boost economic growth
By some measures, the new government seems to recognize the importance
of IT. While Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee highlighted that
reviving the Indian economy will be a top priority, Home Affairs
Minister P. Chidambaram said the government has initiated a scheme to
provide multipurpose national identity cards (MNIC) to every citizen
by 2011.

PwC's Ratan said: "The unique ID (or MNIC) scheme can help the
government in targeting the right people for government programs and
subsidies." Today there is no one, uniform way of identifying an
individual in India.

Also, in May 2006, the government approved the National e-Governance
Plan (NeGP) comprising of 27 Mission Mode Projects (MMPs) and 10
components. The NeGP seeks to make all government services accessible
to the general population through common service delivery outlets,
thereby, ensuring efficiency, transparency and reliability of such
services at affordable costs.

According to Nasscom, the government needs to develop public-private
partnerships to accelerate implementation of approved e-government
programs and evolve appropriate new initiatives. It also needs to
increase government IT budgets to provide a strong stimulus to the
local IT-BPO industry and economy.

The Department of Information Technology (DIT) Web site lists status
reports of several MMPs. Chakraborti said: "The impact of e-government
schemes will be felt in the next five to seven years. We may not see
immediate impact of schemes."

Swati Prasad is a freelance IT writer based in India.


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