Digital India Nears 11 Years, Driving India's Next Phase of Technology-Led Growth through Artificial Intelligence, Semiconductor Manufacturing, Digital Public Infrastructure and Affordable Digital Connectivity

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Digital India @ 11 Years: Technology-Led Growth through AI, Semiconductors, DPI & Connectivity

UPSC Study Note | GS-III (Science & Technology / Economy) | Current Affairs: June 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2014 25.15 crore internet connections; broadband at 6.1 crore [S4]
1 July 2015 Digital India Programme launched; vision: digitally empowered society & knowledge economy [S1]
2016 BharatNet Phase I commences; Aadhaar-based Direct Benefit Transfer scaled [S5]
2019 UPI crosses 1 billion monthly transactions milestone
2021 Semicon India Programme announced; PLI for IT Hardware launched
2022 India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) established under MeitY; ₹76,000 crore incentive package approved
March 2024 IndiaAI Mission approved — ₹10,371.92 crore over 5 years [S4]
2024–25 10 semiconductor projects approved; investment of ₹1.60 lakh crore across 6 states [S2]
2025–26 ISM 2.0 launched; total to 12 projects; ₹1.64 lakh crore; compute crosses 45,000 GPUs [S1][S3]
Jan 2026 DigiLocker reaches 67.63 crore users; 950 crore+ documents issued [S4]
July 2026 Digital India completes 11 years [S1]

Predecessor initiatives: National e-Governance Plan (NeGP) (2006), National Broadband Policy (2004), IT Act 2000 — all precursors to Digital India's integrated architecture.


4. Core Static Facts

A. Programme Overview

B. IndiaAI Mission

C. Semiconductor Ecosystem (Semicon India / ISM)

D. Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI)

E. Connectivity (BharatNet & Internet)

F. Startup & Innovation


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Digital India was launched on 1 July 2015 under the Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MeitY). [S1]
  2. IndiaAI Mission was approved on 7 March 2024 with a budget of ₹10,371.92 crore over five years. [S4]
  3. As of mid-2026, the IndiaAI Shared Compute Facility has over 45,000 GPUs. [S1]
  4. ₹1.64 lakh crore investment has been approved across 12 semiconductor projects under the Semicon India Programme. [S1]
  5. Electronics is now India's third-largest export category. [S1]
  6. ISM 2.0 (India Semiconductor Mission 2.0) was announced in Union Budget 2026–27. [S6]
  7. India targets designing and manufacturing chips for 70–75% of domestic applications by 2029. [S2]
  8. UPI processed 21.70 billion transactions worth ₹28.33 lakh crore in January 2026 — recognised by IMF as world's largest retail fast-payment system (June 2025). [S4]
  9. DigiLocker had 67.63 crore registered users and over 950 crore documents issued as of March 2026. [S4]
  10. BharatNet has connected 2.18 lakh Gram Panchayats using 6.92 lakh km of optical fibre cable (Jan 2025). [S4]
  11. Internet connections grew from 25.15 crore (2014) to 102.86 crore (2026). [S4]
  12. Startup employment under Digital India reached 23.36 lakh; nearly half of startups have at least one woman director or partner. [S1]
  13. DHRUV64 is India's first 1.0 GHz, 64-bit dual-core processor — a semiconductor design milestone. [S7]
  14. Mahakumbh 2025 was cited as a global benchmark for AI + DPI deployment in event management. [S2]
  15. IT sector revenue reached USD 283 billion; demand for AI professionals projected at 1 million by 2026. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

Dimension Detail
GS-III Science & Technology; Indian Economy; Infrastructure; Growth & Development
GS-II Government Policies & Interventions; e-Governance; Role of MeitY; Issues relating to development

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Science & Technology — developments and their applications and effects in everyday life - Government budgeting; mobilisation of resources; inclusive growth - e-Governance — applications, models, successes, limitations, and potential

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) has emerged as India's most scalable governance innovation. Critically examine how DPI, when integrated with Artificial Intelligence, can accelerate Viksit Bharat 2047 — and what safeguards are necessary." (GS-III / Essay)

  2. "India's semiconductor ambition under the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) is both an economic imperative and a strategic necessity. Analyse the challenges India must overcome to achieve full-stack chip manufacturing capability by 2035." (GS-III)

  3. "Assess how Digital India's three pillars — infrastructure, services, and empowerment — have transformed India's governance landscape over the last decade. What structural gaps remain?" (GS-II / GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection to This Topic
India Semiconductor Mission (ISM & ISM 2.0) Direct sub-scheme; ₹1.64 lakh crore investment; chip fabs and design ecosystem
IndiaAI Mission ₹10,371.92 crore scheme; GPU compute; ethical AI guidelines; AI for governance
Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) Aadhaar–UPI–DigiLocker stack; India's exportable DPI model; G20 context
BharatNet Connectivity backbone for rural Digital India; Gram Panchayat last-mile
Startup India & DPIIT Startup employment (23.36 lakh); innovation ecosystem; women entrepreneurship
PLI Scheme for Electronics / IT Hardware Production Linked Incentive — drives electronics exports becoming 3rd largest category
National Data Governance Framework (NDGF) Data sovereignty, AI dataset availability, ethical use — companion to IndiaAI Mission
Viksit Bharat 2047 Overarching development vision that Digital India/AI/Semiconductors serve as instruments for

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: Digital India is under MeitY (not NITI Aayog or Ministry of Finance). NITI Aayog plays an advisory/coordination role but is not the implementing ministry.

  2. GPU count confusion: The IndiaAI Mission's original target was ~18,693 GPUs in the approved plan; actual compute crossed 34,000 by May 2025 and is 45,000+ by mid-2026. Aspirants confuse the original target figure (18,693) with the current deployment.

  3. Semiconductor investment figures: ₹1.60 lakh crore (10 projects, Dec 2025) vs. ₹1.64 lakh crore (12 projects, 2026) — both figures appear in PIB sources; the latter is current. Do not cite ₹76,000 crore (the 2021 incentive envelope) as total investment.

  4. ISM vs. Semicon India Programme: The India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) is the nodal implementation agency; Semicon India Programme is the broader policy/incentive umbrella. They are related but not identical — ISM operates under Semicon India.

  5. UPI's IMF recognition year: The IMF recognised UPI as the world's largest retail fast-payment system in June 2025, not 2024. Do not conflate with earlier RBI or World Bank citations about UPI's scale.


11. Sources


All facts sourced exclusively from Tier 1 (pib.gov.in / meity.gov.in) government sources. No Tier 3/4 sources used. Last updated: 27 June 2026.