As India marches toward the vision of Viksit Bharat@2047, technology is not just an enabler—it is a driving force for transformative governance. Two powerful forces—Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) and Artificial Intelligence (AI)—are converging to redefine the nature, reach, and efficiency of public administration. India today stands on the cusp of a technological revolution that could redefine governance for a billion-plus people. At its core lies an idea that is uniquely Indian: how to deploy Artificial Intelligence (AI) not as an expensive novelty or a luxury tool, but as a transformative force—safe, responsible, and inclusive—built atop the nation’s world-class Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI). With a focus on cost-effectiveness, ethical integrity, and massive scalability, India’s AI journey is not just about catching up with the West; it’s about pioneering a new model of public service and economic empowerment.
Aadhaar: The Foundation of India’s Digital Public Infrastructure
At the heart of this transformation lies the visionary leadership of technocrats Nandan Nilekani and R.S. Sharma, whose work in delivering Aadhaar laid the bedrock of India’s DPI movement.They served as the founding father of the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI). Under their leadership, Aadhaar evolved from an identity program to a nationwide digital identity platform with open APIs capable of enabling authentication, financial inclusion, and service delivery at scale. This design choice became the linchpin of India Stack—ushering in a new generation of interoperable platforms like e-KYC, DigiLocker, and UPI.Aadhaar thus became the first layer of DPI, delivering digital identity and trust at population scale, and laying the foundation for sectoral DPIs in finance, healthcare, education, and welfare. The UIDAI leadership critical insight was in architecting Aadhaar not just as a static identity document, but as a platform.
AI Makes DPI Better: India’s Unique Edge
As Nandan Nilekani aptly puts it, “AI makes DPI better.” India’s digital infrastructure—Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker, CoWIN, and NDAP—has already transformed the service delivery model. These platforms have created the groundwork for a new phase: AI-infused governance that can act smarter, faster, and more humanely. India’s ability to marry DPI and AI is not accidental—it stems from a decade of public-sector innovation that has leapfrogged legacy systems. The result is a nation poised to become the “AI use capital of the world,” not because it leads in AI research or chip design, but because it leads in real-world AI adoption for human progress.
The AI Playbook: Narrow Use Cases, Broad Impact
India’s AI strategy avoids chasing hype. It is about pragmatic deployment—narrow, outcome-driven use cases that solve specific problems at scale. AI in India is already streamlining public service delivery through chatbots in local languages, predictive analytics for agriculture, real-time disaster management tools, and multilingual education platforms. Take DigiLocker, now powered by AI for real-time document verification, or the RAHAT app in Assam, which leverages AI for flood alerts and evacuation logistics. These are not futuristic pilots—they are working solutions transforming lives today.
Trust and Transition: The Human Element in Machine Intelligence
But let’s be clear—AI is not magic. As Nilekani warns, “Adopting AI at scale is hard work and will continue to be so.” The transition demands more than algorithms—it demands trust. Unlike past deterministic technologies, AI decisions often feel like a “black box,” making transparency and accountability non-negotiable. India’s emphasis on responsible AI—through Safe & Trusted AI frameworks and ethical guidelines—is vital to earning public trust, especially when decisions impact welfare, health, or livelihoods.
Interestingly, Indians are already showing a leap of faith in machine-driven decisions, perhaps more readily than in other democracies. Yet the margin for error is slim. A malfunction in a welfare distribution algorithm can do more damage than a hundred bureaucratic delays. That’s why India’s AI policy is cautious, iterative, and human-centric, learning from global models like the EU’s AI Act but grounded in its own democratic, developmental context.
Population-Scale AI: Challenges of Scale and Speed
What sets India apart is its ambition to do AI at population scale—and at population-level affordability. The challenges are real. Data fragmentation, infrastructure gaps, cybersecurity threats, and skill shortages pose complex hurdles. Rural India still lacks stable connectivity, and many public sector institutions are ill-equipped to handle AI integrations.
But the solutions are emerging too. Initiatives like the INDIAai Mission with a ₹10,300 crore budget, public-private collaborations, state-specific AI research centers, and the expansion of AI skilling through INDIAai FutureSkills are bridging the gap. Meanwhile, open-source Indian language AI models are breaking the cost barrier, paving the way for inclusive, voice-first interfaces that can reach the digitally underserved.
AI for Bharat: Local Languages, Local Solutions
One of the most transformative aspects of India’s AI vision is its multilingualism. With over 22 official languages and hundreds of dialects, India’s population can’t be served by English-centric AI models. The shift from keyboard to voice and video interfaces will unlock access for millions. This is where India can lead globally—not in building the most complex models, but in adapting them meaningfully for local needs.
From Meesho to Zepto, India’s startup ecosystem is proving that domestic innovation can outmaneuver global giants when it aligns with local realities. The same principle applies to AI. Startups building models for Indian agriculture, rural healthcare, and education in regional languages are redefining what inclusive innovation looks like.
DPI + AI = GovAI: The Next Leap in Digital Democracy
India’s next governance revolution is “GovAI”—Governance powered by AI. DPI was the first leap—democratizing access, identity, and financial inclusion. AI is the next—making these services intelligent, adaptive, and predictive. Together, they represent a new governance operating system—faster in decision-making, fairer in delivery, and firmer in accountability.
And this isn’t just an Indian story. As Chair of the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence (GPAI), India has a responsibility to show how AI can work in democracies—for the people, not just profit. The world is watching how a developing nation turns ethical AI into public good, especially in times when trust in tech is waning globally.
The Institutional Architecture for GovAI
India is already building the necessary architecture. Initiatives like IndiaAI Mission, Bhashini for multilingual AI, and India Datasets platform are foundational. But what’s needed now is a dedicated mission-mode program to institutionalize GovAI across ministries and states. This includes:
- GovAI Use-Case Registry: A centralized repository of AI models, tools, and success stories across government domains.
- GovAI Sandboxes: Secure, policy-backed spaces to test and validate AI applications using synthetic and anonymized real data.
- GovAI Centers of Excellence: At the intersection of academia, startups, and governance, to accelerate research, deployment, and capacity building.
- Public AI Assets: Just like public datasets, India should build and maintain open foundational AI models for public use, trained on India-relevant data.
The Road Ahead: Building AI for Bharat, With Bharat
To make GovAI real, India must now:
- Strengthen AI Infrastructure: Prioritize investments in rural computing, cloud infrastructure, and reliable connectivity.
- Unify and Clean Data: Launch structured, consent-based data platforms to train AI ethically.
- Legislate Smartly: Build an AI legal framework aligned with global standards, but tailored to Indian realities.
- Democratize AI Skills: Expand AI literacy beyond metros—into schools, panchayats, and small towns.
- Secure the Systems: Make cybersecurity the cornerstone of AI governance.
- Support Startups: Create AI innovation sandboxes and funding mechanisms for Bharat-specific solutions.
From Digital India to Intelligent India
India’s digital journey—Aadhaar to UPI to AI—is not just a case study. It’s a living laboratory of how technology can serve democracy, equity, and development. AI is not pixie dust. It’s hard work, full of complexity. But with vision, responsibility, and inclusive design, India is showing how it can be done—at cost, at scale, and with purpose. GovAI is not a dream—it’s the next chapter. And India, with its fusion of DPI and AI, is writing it in real time. The world should take notes.
GovAI is not the end—it is the next milestone in India’s journey from Digital India to Intelligent India. The coming decade will be defined by how well we embed intelligence into the machinery of the state—ethically, inclusively, and efficiently.If DPI was about presence and access, GovAI is about precision and anticipation. This is not just technological transformation—it is administrative reform through intelligence. By leading this frontier, India can prove to the world that it is possible to combine scale, innovation, and equity in public governance—and, in doing so, chart a model for the world.
(The views expressed are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect the position of the organisation)