1 / 32

Intelligent Village – Vibrant India

Intelligent Village – Vibrant India. Building Foundations for Rural Entrepreneurship. 135 million rural households. The Rural Scene. About 2/3 rds of India’s rural population engaged in agriculture, accounts for less than 1/4 th of the National Income

sylvia-ware
Download Presentation

Intelligent Village – Vibrant India

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intelligent Village – Vibrant India Building Foundations for Rural Entrepreneurship

  2. 135 million rural households The Rural Scene • About 2/3rdsof India’s rural population engaged in agriculture, accounts for less than 1/4thof the National Income • In 600,000+ villages (about 1000 people per village with per-capita income of Rs. 20 per day) • per capita GDP of Rs 10,000 per year • Of the 135 million Rural Households, nearly 102 million have a per-capita income of Rs. 300 per month

  3. Can we make a Difference? Remote Eye Care with Aravind Hospitals • Can technologies make a significant difference? • Can it bring to them health & Education • Can it significantly enhance their incomes?

  4. Components of Our Rural Development Strategy National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme (NREGP) Act – Bharat Nirman – National - targeting lack of enhancing rural eGovernance Plan – opportunities infrastructure enabling ICT as a tool for development Comprehensive Rural Development Strengthening Sarva St rategy Shiksha Abhiyan with National Rural Universalization of Health Mission with Midday Meal Rural Sanitation – programme – raising improving rural Right to Information levels of literacy and health & well - being Act – enhancing educational attainment transparency

  5. Government of India’s NeG Plan NeGP Vision “All Government services available to the common man in his locality, throughout his life, through a one-stop-shop (integrated service delivery), ensuring efficiency, transparency, & reliability”

  6. National Action Plan on e-Governance Road Transport Citizen Database Police Central Excise Pensions India Portal HRD CM Networks Land Records Land Regn Core Policies Insurance Banking BPR Gateway Archi- tecture Passport Visa DCA21 Commrl Taxes Treasuries Income Tax Agriculture CSC - A Network of Rural Service Points across the length and breadth of India

  7. Do ‘CSC Type’ initiatives exist in present times? What we’ve looked at so far… Yes! A host of them and Successful too! The CSC is an attempt to integrate and scale-up such Initiatives through National eGovernance Plan

  8. The ‘CSC Scheme’ – Rationale, Objective • CSC - an important component of the NeGP is a network of service points across the length and breadth of rural India • CSC aims to provide access to information, backed with relevant infrastructure and end-to-end services that would allow rural population, the opportunities to enhance their quality of life • By enabling access to a large number of services like e-Government, education, health, credit, etc. the CSCs offer a solid foundation for the economic prosperity of rural India

  9. The ‘CSC Scheme’ – Rationale, Objective Contd… • A “CSC” is an internet kiosk in a village with PC+Internet+Printer, etc. • A CSC would be serving the people residing in the village where it is located and also a catchment of population 5-6 villages surrounding the CSC Village • Range of CSC Services – B2C(Sale of Agri-Products, IT Training, Railway Tickets, DTP Services, Digital Photography); G2C (Form Downloads, Land Records, Certificates, Online Application Regn., Mandi Rates) • The CSC Operator (Village Level Entrepreneur) will be selected from the village and provided training. VLE will be responsible for running the CSC business and providing services to the villagers.

  10. Who drives the CSC Scheme? • Government of India • Department of Information Technology (DIT) - Nodal Agency for NeGP –CSC Scheme- Implementation • IL&FS – National Level Service Agency (NLSA) - is currently managing the massive initiative of setting up CSCs in 1,00,000+ villages in the country • State Governments • State Level Agency (SLA) responsible for coordinating implementation of CSC Scheme • Grassroots • Service Centre Agency (SCA) – Promoter of Rural ICT Initiative – Prime Driver of Business and Service Channel Manager • Village Level Entrepreneur (VLE) – CSC (Village Kiosk) Operator

  11. Challenges for the Scheme Explicit • Low levels of educational attainment of the rural populace • Lack of awareness of ICT advancements • Poor socio-economic status Implicit • Lack of understanding of PPP frameworks • Lack of appreciation of alternate viable livelihood opportunities • Lack of exposure to innovative practices, technological illiteracy

  12. Opportunities Ahead……….. The Evolution Path • CSC to evolve into a full-fledged catalyst for a two-way exchange of goods and services between rural India and the world • CSC as a Focal Point • Value Sourcing from Rural India • Value-added Products/Services • Achieving the Service Pyramid

  13. Aiming at the Services ‘Pyramid’ Building Livelihoods Data Collection, Rural BPOs Quality of Life Entertainment & Community Radio Social Development Education, Healthcare, Agricultural Extension, etc. Income Opportunities E-Commerce / Online Marketplace/Market linkages Save Costs E-Government Services/Utility Services

  14. Opportunities for Saving Costs • Government Services • Land records • Registrations • Government certificates and forms • Electricity bill payment • Grievances redressal mechanism • Commercial Services • Data entry (affidavits, estimates, resumes, etc.) • Printing, photocopy, bill payments, online ticketing, digital photography, document scanning, etc. • Banking and Finance • Extension counters for lead banks and micro-finance institutions

  15. Income Opportunities, Quality of Life • Income-Building • Agri-Procurement – e.g. ITC-IBD, Godrej Agrovet, Tata Chemicals, Chambal Fertlizers, IFFCO…lately…Reliance and Bharti • Data Collection • Vocational Training and Entrepreneurship – e.g. MICO Bosch • eCommerce – national/international handicrafts procurement agencies, trade portals such as e-Bay • Bill Collection, Public Grievance Handling • Developmental Services • Education and health services – Apollo Hospitals, Aravind Eye Care, AISECT, NIIT • Quality of Life Services • FMCG Goods – e.g. toothpaste, nail-cutters, soaps, baby food, OTC Medicines, • Community radio • Cable Service Providers –community television • Astrology, matrimonial services, employment services, etc.

  16. Example: A VLE through CSC will offer a Farmer…. PRODUCTION RISK COVERAGE & PRICE RISK COVERAGE HARVEST & TRANSPORT OF PRODUCE facilitation STORAGE facilitation CREDIT facilitation INPUT facilitation Seeds, Fertilisers, Pesticides, Farm Machinery, Soil Testing KNOWLEDGE / Extension Services Facilitation/ Alternate farming IRRIGATION facilitation MARKET INFO, Price Info & Linkage facilitation

  17. Example: IETS Partnership with ITC ITC-IBD and IETS working together on promoting e-Education (Pilot in 11 villages in Yavatmal) ValueProposition • Sanchalak: Round the year revenue potential and social standing • Student end: Access to education solutions, which help improves their quality of education and their academic performance • Teacher: Access to programs which helps improve their ability to deliver quality education and increase their revenue potential

  18. Government Support….Viability of Rural Kiosk • Government has underscored the need for support to achieve sustainability around e-Government services in rural kiosks • Emphasis is on achieving ‘optimum support level’ that neither discourages or over-incentivizes the SCA/VLE, leading to under-performance • Over the first phase of the project (i.e. first four years of operation) the ‘minimum’ Opex is nearly 2.5 times of the initial infrastructure cost • Clearly, the bigger challenge is to cover the revenue gaps and associated risks which arise in rural markets • To that effect, Government of India (DIT) has proposed a revenue-based governmental intervention and support, rather than a capital subsidy. • Essentially the Government support will take the form of: • Guaranteed Provision of Government Services:Viability Funding • Debt Service Reserve Fund : Liquidity Support

  19. Government Support…Technology & Connectivity • Technology Architecture framework being drafted for hardware, software, connectivity options at • CSC Level • SCA Level • SPV Level • The framework would be made available to the SCAs as well as States • Initiated discussions with BSNL and other telecom operators for leveraging their rural footprint • Assessing various options on Language Interface for providing multi-lingual capabilities • Interacting with State Governments to assess their SWAN implementation status

  20. Business Model for the CSC Scheme • The SCA will drive the CSC business. Headquartered at a District or Taluk, the SCA will manage the CSCs set up in select villages, manned by VLEs • SCA and the selected VLE will enter into a business agreement • SCA will invest in physical infrastructure, develop portfolio of B2C, G2C services, tie-up with Technology Service Providers (TSPs), facilitate bank linkages for the VLE-CSC, train the VLE on new contents, mentor the VLE • VLE using his clout in the village needs to assess the felt need for ICT-based services, build social capital and business opportunities, make CSC the one-stop-shop for the villagers

  21. Business Model for the CSC Scheme Contd… VLE Business Model • VLE will invest an amount ranging between Rs. 15,000/- and Rs. 30,000/- as ‘Deposit’ with the SCA. • VLE will spend on Selection and Training expenses ~ Rs. 2500/- • VLE will have to part with a Revenue Share + Fixed Monthly service Charge to SCA In return…VLE will have • Income from CSC Services • Infrastructure Support for CSC – PC, Internet, Printer, etc. • Access to Training and Mentoring • Bank-linkage – Handholding support from SCA Field Staff for Loaning Process from Banks • Revenue-Shortfall Support from Government through the SCA

  22. Business Model for the CSC Scheme Contd… SCA Business Model • SCA will invest in Physical Infrastructure, CSC Hardware and Software • SCA will incur Operational Costs In return…SCA will receive • Revenue-Share + Fixed Monthly Service Charge from VLE • Revenue-Shortfall Support from Government

  23. Critical Enabling Factor ...Rural Entrepreneurship • To carry out all the activities outlined before…a single critical factor stands out …i.e., “Rural Entrepreneurship” • Rural entrepreneurship, is community based, has strong extended family linkages and a relatively large impact on a rural community. • A rural entrepreneur is someone who is prepared to stay in the rural area and contribute to the creation of local wealth. • The economic goals of a rural entrepreneur and the social goals of rural development are strongly inter-linked.

  24. Rural Entrepreneurship - A Novel Approach • How does a Rural Entrepreneur or Village Level Entrepreneur (VLE) get Created? Usually, Personal Characteristics + Socio-Economic Aspects make a…VLE.. • However, VLE can also be created through a set of supporting institutions and through deliberate innovative action…. And this is where IETS steps in…. Deliberate Innovative Action … in terms of Education and Training. Rural Entrepreneurship Training greatly affects supply of rural entrepreneurs….thus is indirectly an important source of rural entrepreneurship.

  25. Who can be a VLE? Geography-wise Candidate belonging to a Rural Location – Village, Gram Panchayat, etc. Occupation-wise Any Occupation….One who is running a small business in village, educated unemployed youth, retired government functionaries, Ex- Servicemen, farmer, etc. Socio-Economic Condition Not relevant… Personal Traits Self-disciplined, willing to serve the community, willing to learn and earn by put learning to practice

  26. CSC – An Opportunity for Army Personnel to Build the Rural Foundation • The CSC Scheme presents a good opportunity for the Army to retrain and redeploy its strong workforce in peace-time grassroots initiatives • CSC provides a unique opportunity for Post-retirement pursuits. Every year around 20,000 army personnel of various ranks, retire from their Commissions. • CSC Scheme is all about Nation Building and Social Entrepreneurship which is all about serving Village Communities through Rural Entrepreneurship • Army recruitment drive could be further decentralized using CSC as Centres for Awareness Building, Promotion and Receiving Applications • CSC can provide a unique platform to forge a win-win partnership [Advanced Technology + Disciplined Workforce at Grassroots] aimed at Rural Prosperity

  27. How to participate in CSC? Contd… • IL&FS-IETS is exploring the possibility of associating with the Indian Army in bringing the ex-servicemen and retired army personnel irrespective of their ranks into the CSC fold. IETS believes… • The Indian Army provides a rich resource-base of disciplined, capable and determined human force to reckon with for peace-time nation building activities • A large number of Army personnel serving across the country in different ranks complete their commission term every year and return to the civilian fold – in most cases settle in rural areas

  28. About IL&FS - IETS

  29. IETS Activities • IL&FS Education and Technology Services Limited (IETS) is promoted by IL&FS • Key Objectives - Making learning experience-led, interactive, insight-based and stimulating thereby improving the overall quality of education delivery • IETS is also engaged in undertaking capacity building initiatives for government employees, village level entrepreneurs, NGOs, etc. in the realm of governance and rural entrepreneurship. • Some of our Initiatives:

  30. IETS Team • 200 professionals with over 90 percent working in the operative divisions and the core support functions • Academicians, administrators, social scientists, policy formulators, consultants and technocrats form part of IETS’s team. Such diversity adds to the overall vibrancy and strength of the team

  31. Partnering for Change.… • IL&FS being the national level coordinating agency, seeks partnerships with like-minded organizations and individuals who share their commitment and passion to enhance the economic landscape of rural India through training and capacity building • We would be more than glad to guide and assist interested Parties in their endeavours

  32. Thank You!

More Related