Blitz Bureau
As the Digital India programme completes a decade this month, its most visible legacy is the ease with which ordinary transactions now happen — a street vendor accepting a phone payment, a patient consulting a doctor online, a health record travelling with its owner rather than gathering dust in a file.
The Unified Payments Interface, the backbone of that shift, now settles close to half of the world’s real-time digital payments and processes well over 60 crore transactions on an average day. Alongside it, the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission has crossed 90 crore health accounts, and the e-Sanjeevani telemedicine service — now supported by AI-assisted clinical guidance — has delivered more than 44 crore online consultations.
Built as public infrastructure rather than a private walled garden, India’s digital stack has widened access instead of narrowing it.
At a Glance
- Milestone: Digital India programme completes 10 years
- UPI: ~50% of the world’s real-time payments
- Health IDs: 90 crore+ ABHA accounts created
- Telemedicine: 44 crore+ e-Sanjeevani consultations
The system’s design choices explain its reach. Because UPI, digital identity and health records were built as open, interoperable public goods, small merchants and low-income households were pulled into the formal economy rather than left outside it — and the same rails are now being offered to partner countries, with UPI acceptance extending abroad.
The honest next challenge is inclusion at the edges: reliable connectivity in remote districts, protection against digital fraud, and support for citizens less at ease with smartphones. Meeting those needs — through stronger rural networks, plain-language safeguards and assisted-access points — is how a decade of gains becomes a genuinely universal digital society.












