- While pharmacies are private businesses, and there are private equity-funded e-pharmacy and medical consulting sites like 1mg, NetMeds and PharmaEasy, Praco and DocPrime, the government decided to launch a telemedicine platform esanjeevani.in, which allows anyone to register, consult a doctor, and download a prescription. The government has also launched PM Jana Aushadhi Kendra, a chain of pharmacies that will sell generic medicines.
- Last year, during Covid restrictions, the government launched a desi, rural version of Big Basket by creating a village-level online retail chain, which would deliver large volumes of essential items like vegetables, milk, pulses, fruit, and other products through fast-expanding outlets, taking orders online and offline, and carrying out home deliveries. This ambitious plan is being led by the Common Service Centres, a rural digital outreach vehicle of the government that reaches over 600 million people through nearly 380,000 outlets.
- Apart from the UPI and RuPay, the government had launched the payment facility Bharat Interface for Money (BHIM). Initially, only one bank account was allowed to be linked to BHIM, but in 2019, an official was quoted saying “the next version of BHIM will give full-fledged competition to private payment platforms”.
- Two years ago, National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) launched the Bharat Bill Pay System, a single platform for all utility billers. At that time the BBPS supported just five categories of payments — direct-to-home, electricity, gas, telecom, and water bills. Then, one fine day the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said: “To leverage the advantages of the BBPS and harness its full potential, it has been decided to permit all categories of billers (except pre-paid recharges), who provide for recurring bill payments to participate in BBPS.” A direct hit at private players like BillDesk. One news portal correctly called it the creeping socialisation of fintech.
- Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel, and Vodafone Idea may have spent billions to create a countrywide broadband infrastructure, but the government decided to spend its own $7.1 billion on BharatNet to provide a minimum of 100 Mbit/s broadband connectivity to all 250,000-gram panchayats in the country, covering nearly 625,000 villages. This was conceived by the previous government when the broadband network in the country was weak, but the Modi government gave a big boost to its implementation instead of pushing for the Universal Service Obligation to extend the reach of private networks.
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