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The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) has completed issuance of 51 crore Aadhaar numbers. With generation of about 11 lakh Aadhaar numbers every day, the flagship programme appears all set to complete its mandate of covering 60 crore population in the next few months.

 

2. Established as an ‘Attached Office’ of the Planning Commission through a Government Notification in January 2009, UIDAI issued the first Aadhaar Number on 29 September 2010 after completing necessary preliminaries including establishing various standards relating to collection of data and biometric information such as finger prints and iris images. UIDAI issued 8 crore Aadhaar number in the period up to November 2011, another 15 crore in the next one year until November 2012, and has issued a further 28 crore Aadhaar number in the past 12 months. Eleven States and Unions Territories now have Aadhaar saturation levels of 75% or above, with several of them such as Andhra Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Tripura, Delhi and Chandigarh at levels above 90%.

 

3. Enrolment for Aadhaar is entirely voluntary and the Aadhaar number is already used as a Proof of Identify or Proof of Address or both by several programmes and schemes run by Central and State Governments. A number of regulatory authorities such as Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA), Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) and Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) have declared Aadhaar number as a valid ‘know your customer’ (KYC) and ‘electronically know your customer’ (eKYC) for purposes under their respective domains. This has led to Aadhaar being leveraged not only as a tool for financial inclusion and empowerment, but also as a major convenience for Aadhaar number holders in their dealings with banks, insurance companies, and other providers of financial services. Recently, RBI has also accepted Aadhaar number as a second factor of authentication along with “EMV Chip and pin’ for all future deployment of point-of-sale (POS) devices and ATMs.

 

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4. More than 4 crore Aadhaar number holders have so far linked their bank accounts with Aadhaar, to take advantage of the above convenience, in particular the Aadhaar Enabled Payment Services (AEPS). These Aadhaar linked bank account holders can send and receive money using Aadhaar number as a permanent financial address, without having to disclose their bank details to the other parties. Like a number of Aadhaar based services, access to AEPS is also based on on-line authentication. A total of over 1.49 crore authentications by 37.9 lakh unique number holders have already been carried out at levels exceeding 92 percent of accuracy. In a new service introduced recently, six banks, including State Bank of India (SBI), currently provide for Aadhaar-to-Aadhaar mobile based payments.

 

5. With its capability of usage in re-engineering of government processes, Aadhaar numbers have been leveraged in implementation of several programmes/ schemes of Central and State Governments, including the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) introduced on a phase-wise basis for 28 Central Sector schemes in 121 districts of the country, and Direct Benefit Transfer for Liquefied Petroleum Gas (DBTL) in 95 districts. Districts with high level of Aadhaar saturation have been chosen for implementation initially, and over 1500 crore rupees have already been transferred over the Aadhaar Payment Bridge (APB) in more than 2.8 crore transactions under DBT and DBTL. Usage of Aadhaar numbers has helped in preventing duplicates and fakes, leading to substantial savings even in the initial phase of implementation.

 

6. As many as 156 banks, including a number of co-operative and rural banks, are currently participating on the APB platform. Several State Governments have leveraged Aadhaar in the roll-out of their programmes/ schemes – among the earliest users was the Government of Andhra Pradesh for Public Distribution System. Such usage of Aadhaar numbers makes it possible to achieve higher levels of transparency, better levels of beneficiary satisfaction, more accurate targeting, and prevention of leakages and wastages.

 

7. The largest biometric data-base of its kind in the world, Aadhaar has many firsts to its credit. The online authentication and eKYC services are not only reliable, low cost, instantaneous and environment-friendly, but are also un-paralleled in the world, in their scope and magnitude.

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Comments
11 years ago Prakash R

Without bringing all other identity cards like pan card, debit cards, credit cards, voter id cards, passport, ration card, postal id cards, into one document reference or interlinking them into one platform, this will lead to serious corruption . There will be duplication of cards, even, in the Aadhar card above scheme itself, many citizens are being asked to retake the card again. This will lead to duplication and at one point of time , the government will point and turn the fingers on the citizens to have two Aadhar cards just because, they are forced to take twice. The reason given for taking again is that the finger prints were not correctly taken in the early programs. This is Very Very pathetic and bad . This will lead the exchequer huge burden and the govt. will be having wrong statistics. From now on, the govt. should bring in to linking all the data of what ever the citizens are having as stated above. Also the main point in this card missing is the blood group category not being asked / mentioned in the card. I had the privilege of implementing the first smart card scheme /system in the country by the RBI for the old age pensioners as a pilot project to be implemented at WARANGAL, AP State in which the earlier details were keyed in for avoiding duplication, repetition. by this method all the malpractises were stopped and the real beneficiary are happy. (WARANGAL is a naxal affected district and hence pilot project was implemented in the country at this place !!!)


11 years ago slakshmanrao

A Project with out a definite time schedule, may not fetch timely results.


11 years ago slakshmanrao

A Project with out a definite time schedule, may not fetch timely results.


11 years ago slakshmanrao

A Project with out a definite time schedule, may not fetch timely results.


11 years ago slakshmanrao

Banking alerts in the contact numbers is a better option to !!! Aadhar Cards!!! which may be intransit.The point is who will answer the transitional delay beyond the time schedule prescribed.


11 years ago gspal

@slakshmanrao Owing to duplication of data during collection, the union government had divided the country into two data enrolment segments. Fourteen states, including Uttar Pradesh, and two union territories have been designated as the NPR states. Uttar Pradesh residents will get National Population Register (NPR) smart cards and not Aadhaar cards. The benefits, however, would not be different. The move is aimed at guarding against duplication of enrolments with Aadhaar being under the union finance ministry and the NPR under the union home ministry. For this very reason only 51% of th e populace are covered by Aadhar. Work in UP for NPR has just begun in Lucknow. We cannot apply for Aadhar anymore. What will be our fate towards cooking gas subsidy only God knows.


11 years ago slakshmanrao

Does not speek high of the said project.Only 51% at a such a high cost of Public money...Sensible people have started realising that the said card in long run may not be of any use as of now.




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