The Transformative Impact of the Mobile Phone and Electronic Transactions in India: Lessons, Policy Issues and Challenges

Posted: 31 Mar 2017

See all articles by Rekha Jain

Rekha Jain

IIMA-IDEA Telecom Centre of Excellence, IIMA

Prabir K. Neogi

Carleton University

Date Written: March 30, 2017

Abstract

In emerging economies like India, the mobile phone is often the only available device for accessing the Internet and large variety of associated services. With a teledensity, hugely mobile, of nearly 89% of some 1.2bn population as on December 31, 2016, India has become the second largest mobile phone market in the world. The urban teledensity was 170% whereas the rural was 53%. Further, although licenses have been allocated for broadband services such as 3G, 4G/LTE, their deployment is limited, often to urban areas. Additionally, despite the increasing adoption of smartphones, nearly 60% of mobile users have a feature phone in 2016, such numbers being larger in rural areas. The teledensity, extent of deployments and smartphone adoption gaps show the magnitude of the urban-rural digital divide in India.

On another dimension, through its very ambitious Digital India project, the Government of India is trying to promote electronic transactions and payments through a variety of means, to turn India into a “less cash” economy. An aspect that needed to be considered in this initiative was the absence of a nationally recognized identity. In order to respond to this situation, a massive program to provide unique identities, called Aadhar, resulted in the creation of a database of 1.1bn. For digital disbursements and transactions, Aadhar database can be used for real time authentication of identity, thus accelerating adoption of digital transactions.

The success of the Digital India program rests on the quality of the underlying infrastructure policies which, besides access devices, include the fiber backbone and the wireless deployments including the mobile and public wi-fi in rural areas, and the policies and processes of enabling institutions involved in Digital India.

This paper will focus on the impacts of the widespread penetration and use of mobile networks, smartphones and other intelligent mobile devices in India. It will discuss issues such as:

• How does the availability and quality of telecom services influence the design of other enabling and supporting infrastructure and institutions involved in digital transactions, especially for rural areas?

• In addition to efficiently allocating and managing the use of the spectrum, what other roles can governments play in enabling the continued growth of mobile services in the context of the digital divide?

• Under the Digital India project, what initiatives are governments taking in moving India from a “cash driven” to a “less cash” economy, where electronic transactions become the norm?

Policy makers in developing countries like India traditionally deal with conventional issues related to facilitating the growth of mobile communications (e.g. spectrum availability and re-allocation; infrastructure deployment etc.). Moving forward, they will need to formulate policies and regulations, where required, to address new challenges related to the large-scale migration of mobile users from 2G to 3G/4G broadband networks and the use of Internet-based transactional services. How can “Demand Pull” policies complement “Supply Push” initiatives, especially for maintaining the integrity of transactional services against cyber-attacks and cyber-fraud?

Methodology: Based on secondary data and in-depth interviews with officials in UIDAI, banking sector, beneficiaries and state governments.

Keywords: Smartphones, Mobile Communications, Electronic Transactions, Digital India, Enabling Institutional Infrastructure

Suggested Citation

Jain, Rekha and Neogi, Prabir K., The Transformative Impact of the Mobile Phone and Electronic Transactions in India: Lessons, Policy Issues and Challenges (March 30, 2017). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2943357

Rekha Jain (Contact Author)

IIMA-IDEA Telecom Centre of Excellence, IIMA ( email )

Ahmedabad, Gujarat 380015
India

Prabir K. Neogi

Carleton University ( email )

1869 Stonehenge Crescent
Ottawa, Ontario K1B4N7
Canada
6137462329 (Phone)

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