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How Digital India Changed Service Delivery

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The Digital India initiative, launched in 2015, has over a decade transformed the infrastructure through which Indian citizens interact with government services. At its core is the "India Stack" — a layered architecture of digital public infrastructure built on three foundations: Aadhaar (the world's largest biometric identity system, with over 142 crore IDs issued as of April 2025), the Unified Payments Interface (UPI, which processed 16.58 billion financial transactions in a single month in October 2024), and a series of application layers including DigiLocker (digital document storage for over 53.92 crore users as of June 2025), UMANG (unified mobile government services app with 8.34 crore registrations offering 2,300 services in 23 languages), and the Government e-Marketplace (GeM, for public procurement). The Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) system — which uses Aadhaar-linked bank accounts to deliver welfare payments directly to beneficiaries, cutting out intermediaries...

What the RTI Act Changed — and What It Didn't

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The Right to Information Act, 2005 was enacted by the United Progressive Alliance government on October 12, 2005, emerging from a grassroots transparency movement led by Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS) in Rajasthan, which had through the 1990s organised "jan sunwais" (public hearings) at which government records were read out for community verification.  The RTI Act gave every Indian citizen the legal right to request information from any public authority within 30 days (48 hours for matters concerning life or liberty) for a nominal fee of ₹10. It created a three-tier accountability structure: Public Information Officers (PIOs) in every department to receive and respond to requests; First Appellate Authorities to hear appeals from PIOs; and Central and State Information Commissions as oversight bodies with power to penalise non-compliance up to ₹25,000 per case.  Representational Image: What the RTI Act Changed — and What It Didn't Over 2.5 crore (25 million) RTI ap...

How Indian Bureaucracy Resists Reform

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India's administrative system has been subject to more reform recommendations than almost any comparable governance system in the world. Six Pay Commissions since independence have revised civil service compensation; the First Administrative Reforms Commission (1966–70) produced comprehensive recommendations; the Second Administrative Reforms Commission (2005–08) produced 15 detailed reports; NITI Aayog's three-year action agenda, subsequent governance recommendations, and the Sectoral Group of Secretaries on Governance have all proposed specific reforms.  The result of this sustained recommendation is a bureaucracy that has absorbed the language of reform — output-orientation, citizen-centrism, digital transformation — while preserving the essential features that critics identify as its primary problems: seniority-based promotion, insulation from performance accountability, high political interference in transfers, generalist culture resistant to specialisation, and corruption...

How the UPSC and Civil Services Exam Work

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The Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) is a constitutional body established under Article 315 of the Constitution of India, charged with conducting examinations for recruitment to the All India Services and Central Civil Services. Its most consequential function is the Civil Services Examination (CSE) — an annual three-stage process that selects approximately 900–1,100 candidates from a pool of over one million applicants for 24 services including the Indian Administrative Service, Indian Police Service, Indian Foreign Service, Indian Revenue Service, and 20 others.  The examination's design — emphasising broad knowledge across history, geography, polity, economics, ethics, current affairs, and analytical writing — reflects the generalist tradition of the British-origin civil service: the ICS/IAS model holds that an educated, analytical mind can learn any domain it is assigned to administer. Representational Image: How the UPSC and Civil Services Exam Work The scale of the...

How Political Transfers Undermine Indian Bureaucracy

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Of all the dysfunctions documented in Indian bureaucratic governance, the most thoroughly researched and consistently identified is the political manipulation of IAS officer transfers. Academic research using longitudinal datasets of IAS officer postings has established with statistical rigor what administrative practitioners have long known from experience: politicians routinely use the power to transfer officers across posts as a mechanism for rewarding loyal officers and punishing those who resist political direction, creating perverse career incentives that systematically undermine the quality of governance.  Harvard Business School research by Laxmi Iyer and Anandi Mani — using data on the entire career histories of IAS bureaucrats — identified two alternative paths to career success in the Indian civil service: developing genuine expertise and excellence, or developing loyalty to political patrons. These paths produce similar long-run career outcomes, which means the incentiv...

What the IAS Is and How It Actually Works

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The Indian Administrative Service is the apex civil service of the Republic of India and the direct successor to the Indian Civil Service (ICS) of the British Indian Empire, which Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, India's first Home Minister, called the "steel frame" of Indian governance in a 1947 address to the Constituent Assembly.  The IAS is one of three All India Services — alongside the Indian Police Service (IPS) and the Indian Forest Service (IFoS) — whose officers serve both the central government and state governments, functioning as the administrative bridge between Delhi and India's 28 states. Unlike the vast majority of government employees who serve either the Centre or a single state, IAS officers move between the two levels — spending parts of their careers in state cadres and parts on central deputation — making them the principal institutional thread connecting India's federal administrative system. Representational Image: What the IAS Is and How It Actu...

What India's Elections Mean for the World

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India's elections are the world's largest democratic exercise by number of voters — 968 million registered voters in 2024, of whom 642 million actually voted. This scale alone makes them globally consequential: when more people vote in India than in the United States, European Union, Japan, and Australia combined, the result is a significant data point about the health and practice of democratic governance globally.  India's historical self-presentation as the world's largest democracy has been an important element of its soft power — the argument that a large, diverse, poor developing country could sustain electoral democracy without the economic preconditions that Western political science once considered necessary.  The partial erosion of India's democracy quality scores since 2014 has therefore global significance not just for Indians but for the broader argument about democracy as a universal system of governance. Representational Image: What India's Electi...
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