All money spent on e-governance is waste: Sam Pitroda

Have central standards to avoid duplication in the e-governance projects, telecom guru advises

PTI | April 14, 2010


File photo of telcom guru Sam Pitroda
File photo of telcom guru Sam Pitroda

Telecom guru Sam Pitroda has panned e-governance in India, calling it a 'waste', as he believes these projects are not scalable. However, he also said that every possible attempt should be made to avoid duplication in these projects, and suggested central standards on e-governance as a measure for the same.

Speaking via videoconferencing from Chicago in the US, Pitroda said India needs to create its own model of development; not the western way.

"I personally believe the US-model of consumption-based economy is not scalable, sustainable for a country like ours...",Pitroda,who headed the National Knowledge Commission, said. India cannot afford to copy western development model.

Addressing participants of Microsoft-organised TechED 2010, a technology conclave, here, the technocrat said India has its own challenges, requires Indian model (of development) which focused on low-cost solutions.

"We need to learn to innovate on our own",he said, adding, India needs to look at new development models in areas such as education and health.

Pitroda, Advisor to Prime Minister on public information infrastructure and innovations, expressed the view that India's rural areas could become outsourcing hubs for urban centres of the country.

"If Bangalore can become back-office of America, why can't our rural areas become back-office of urban areas ?", asked the man, who laid the foundation for the country's telecom revolution nearly a quarter century ago. .

In the era of computerisation, e-files and broadband penetration, Pitroda said there was no need to have government offices in busy and expensive city centres; instead infrastructure built in rural areas could support such government services.

He said the first phase of ICT (information and communication technologies) revolution in India is beginning to end, and the second phase is about to begin which would have far-reaching implications for the society.

He also foresaw a time in future when all the content would be available on internet and teachers would just have to discharge their role as mentors.

Comments

 

Other News

Voter turnout: Drop from 2019 reduces further

As the voting percentages dropped drastically in the first couple of phases of the ongoing general elections, observers and analysts spoke of ‘voter apathy’ blamed it on a lack of “wave” this time – apart from the heatwave, that is. The latest figures after the fourth phase, h

GAIL reports annual revenue of Rs.1,30,638 crore

GAIL (INDIA) Limited has reported 75% increase in Profit before Tax (PBT) of Rs.11,555 crore in FY24,  as against Rs 6,584 Cr in FY23. Profit after Tax (PAT) in FY24 stands at Rs. 8,836 Cr as against Rs.5,302 Cr in FY23, a 67 % increase. However, revenue from operations registered a fa

Women move forward, one step at a time

“Women’s rights are not a privilege but a fundamental aspect of human rights.” —Savitribai Phule In India, where almost two-thirds of the population resides in rural areas, women’s empowerment initiatives are extremely critical for intensifying l

Why you should vote

What are the direct tangible benefits that you want from the government coming in power? The manifestos of various parties set a host of agendas which many times falls back in materialising the intended gains. Governance failures, policy lapses, implementation gaps, leadership crisis and cultural blockages

How the role of Ayurveda evolved pre- and post-independence

Ayurveda, Nation and Society: United Provinces, c. 1890–1950 By Saurav Kumar Rai Orient BlackSwan, 292 pages, Rs 1,400  

General Elections: Phase 4 voting on in 96 seats

As many as 17.7 crore electors are eligible to vote in the fourth phase of general elections taking place on Monday in 10 states/UTs. 175 Legislative Assembly seats of Andhra Pradesh and 28 Legislative Assembly seats of Odisha are also going to polls in this phase. Polling time in select as

Visionary Talk: Amitabh Gupta, Pune Police Commissioner with Kailashnath Adhikari, MD, Governance Now


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter