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The Aadhaar Ecosystem And IT

The Aadhaar Ecosystem And IT

It has been an interesting journey for Aadhaar from the time the first UID was issued in September 2010. We now have about 1.123 billion Aadhaars for over 99% of India’s adult population. Aided by various legislations proposed over the last couple of months and massively accelerated by the demonetisation and its after effects, Aadhaar is set to become perhaps the most important document that an Indian citizen can have.

A lot has been said and written about the payments landscape and how we see BHIM and the more recent Aadhaar Pay to alter all forms of payments. However, there is also a significant impact on the retail personal finance space–both on the conventional prime lending as well as small finance–to underserved segments. Let us look at the recent proposals and how it changes and aids this space in particular.

The following are the changes that have recently been proposed using the Aadhaar ecosystem:

The problem that is sought to be solved here is pretty clear – leverage the uniqueness of the Aadhaar number and plug and prevent duplicate identities, thereby leading to better enforcement by the relevant authorities.

Scratch the surface a little more and let’s see how this can impact retail lending. Let’s look at this through Joe’s experience, a common man who entered the urban working population a couple of years back and is interacting with the government and other service providers.

When Joe avails the financial product, here’s how this goes into the lending ecosystem for starters. Given there will be more on-boarding using Aadhaar eKYC, lenders will have more and more new Aadhaar seeded facilities. Thus, in turn, it means internal databases as well as the bureau will progressively start getting enriched at a faster rate. Thus lenders and bureaus which have traditionally leaned on PAN (which had issues of duplicates) will have a more water-tight mechanism to conduct better deduplication during the credit-buying process.

While this has been panning out, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology has also made a digital locker for storing documents a reality. With the Digital Locker Authority inviting applications from public and private entities to start operating digital lockers, it should enable and empower people to securely provide authentic documents for perhaps every area of service they wish to avail from public and private service providers.

With Aadhaar gaining prominence, the issue on security of information is another debated topic. I would think the key to this can be encapsulated in the following two points:

Incentivising paperless transactions (financial & others) using the digital authentication mechanism actually gives the consumer better control of his / her data. It ensures that the consumer shares data only with explicit consent and the information gets digitally transferred to the service provider to whom the consent is provided. It is effectively eliminating paper copies and trails that are more prone to unauthorised reproduction and misuse.

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