India··4 min read

Digital Public Infrastructure

India built something the rest of the world is still trying to understand: open, interoperable digital rails that no single company owns.

IndiatechnologyinfrastructureDPIpolicy

Manas Majhi
Manas Majhi

Founder, Majhi Group & Majhi OS

Digital Public Infrastructure

In most discussions of technological leadership, the framing is about which companies are winning, which products are dominant, which platforms have the most users. India's most important technological achievement over the past decade fits none of these frames. It is not a company. It is not a product. It is infrastructure — and the distinction matters enormously.

The India Stack — Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker, and the layers built on top of them — represents something genuinely new in how countries approach digital development. The core insight was deceptively simple: instead of building applications, build the infrastructure that makes a generation of applications possible, and make that infrastructure open, interoperable, and not owned by any single private actor.

Why public infrastructure matters

The pattern in most countries has been that the essential infrastructure for digital services gets built by private companies and owned by them. Payment rails, identity verification, data portability — these get built as proprietary systems, optimized for the interests of the platform that built them.

This creates a specific structural problem: the infrastructure that everyone needs to operate becomes owned by companies with specific commercial interests, and those interests do not always align with broad access, competition, or the kind of open interoperability that would produce the best overall outcomes.

India's approach was to draw a different boundary between public goods and private innovation. The question they asked was: what is the infrastructure layer that is most valuable to everyone but that no individual company has the right incentive to build as open infrastructure? And then build that, publicly, and allow private companies to compete on the application layer above it.

What this produced

UPI is the most visible result. Payment infrastructure built as a public utility, available to any authorized provider, producing transaction volumes that dwarf most national payment systems. The velocity of adoption — from launch to hundreds of millions of transactions per month — reflects what happens when the infrastructure is genuinely accessible rather than controlled by incumbents with reasons to manage adoption carefully.

Aadhaar demonstrated that population-scale digital identity is possible — with all the controversy that brings about privacy and inclusion, which are real concerns that deserve serious engagement. But the underlying capability — a verified digital identity that can be used across contexts, owned by the individual rather than any platform — represents infrastructure that most countries are still trying to figure out how to build.

The ONDC (Open Network for Digital Commerce) is the most recent and most ambitious iteration of this model — an attempt to apply the same logic to e-commerce, preventing the winner-take-all concentration that has characterized e-commerce development elsewhere.

What the rest of the world is learning

The concept of Digital Public Infrastructure is now being discussed in policy circles globally in ways it was not five years ago. The G20, under India's presidency, made DPI a central theme. Development organizations are studying the India Stack as a model for emerging economies trying to leapfrog legacy infrastructure constraints.

The core question being asked is: can the India model be replicated? Can other countries build the same kind of open, interoperable infrastructure without the specific political economy, regulatory environment, and institutional capacity that made India's version possible?

The honest answer is that replication is hard in ways that are underappreciated. The India Stack required sustained political will, strong technical institutions, and a particular moment in India's development trajectory where the conditions aligned. These conditions do not exist everywhere.

But the model itself — the idea that digital infrastructure should be a public good, open and interoperable, rather than a proprietary layer owned by private platforms — is almost certainly right, and India's implementation has done more to demonstrate its feasibility than any amount of theoretical argument could have.

What comes next

The infrastructure is in place. The competition is now on the application layer, where private companies are building on open rails in ways that would not have been possible with proprietary infrastructure.

The next phase is about how this infrastructure evolves as AI becomes central to digital services — and whether the same public infrastructure logic that worked for identity and payments can extend to the AI layer. That question is not yet answered. How India answers it will matter as much as any of the decisions that created the India Stack in the first place.