India's Financial Inclusion Revolution: 530M Bank Accounts & Digital Leadership

Chief Economic Advisor V Anantha Nageswaran highlighted India's digital public infrastructure as a crucial first step in realizing the entrepreneurial aspirations of millions. M Nagaraju, Secretary of the Department of Financial Services, revealed the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana has opened over 530 million accounts, with 56% held by women, significantly empowering them. India now leads the world in digital transactions, with UPI processing over 21 billion transactions in December 2024 alone. Looking ahead, the vision focuses on linking financial inclusion to literacy and security through credit, insurance, and pensions.

Key Points: India's Financial Inclusion: PMJDY Success & Digital Future

  • PMJDY opened over 530 million bank accounts
  • 56% of accounts are held by women, closing gender gap
  • India leads in digital transactions, 50% of global real-time payments
  • UPI processed over 21 billion transactions in Dec 2024
3 min read

"Important first step for realising millions of people's aspirations": CEA Nageswaran on financial inclusion initiatives

CEA Nageswaran hails India's financial inclusion as key step for aspirations. PMJDY opens 530M accounts, empowers women, leads global digital payments.

"It's an important first step for realising millions of people's aspirations - V Anantha Nageswaran"

New Delhi, January 13

Chief Economic Advisor V Anantha Nageswaran at the Global Inclusive Finance Summit on Tuesday highlighted the evolution of India's digital public infrastructure.

Speaking to ANI, he said the initiative represents an important first step toward realising the aspirations of millions of people to become entrepreneurs and supporting them in their professional journeys.

The summit transitioned from its local origins in 2004 to a global platform focused on sharing India's strategies with emerging economies.

Speaking to ANI at the sidelines of the event, Nageswaran said, "It's an important first step for realising millions of people's aspirations and therefore becoming entrepreneurs and then helping them in their journey."

Earlier in the day, at the same event, M Nagaraju, Secretary of the Department of Financial Services, described the launch of the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) on August 28, 2014, as "one of the most transformative days in India's history."

Speaking at the summit, Nagaraju revealed that the scheme has opened more than 530 million bank accounts, with 72 per cent in rural and semi-urban areas. Women now hold 56 per cent of these accounts, effectively eliminating the gender gap in account ownership.

"Apart from the numbers, what has changed in the rural areas is the way women actually started perceiving themselves as equal stakeholders in the economic development of the family," Nagaraju said. "It has given a lot of empowerment to the women."

Deposits in PMJDY accounts have surged to Rs 2.29 trillion, making it the country's largest financial inclusion initiative.

The program operates through 6 lakhs banking correspondents who travel to villages and neighbourhoods to provide banking services.

India now leads the world in digital transactions, accounting for approximately 50 per cent of global real-time payments.

The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) processed more than 21 billion transactions in December 2024, outpacing card transactions by 101 per cent.

The government has leveraged this digital infrastructure to extend credit and insurance coverage to previously underserved populations. Under the Mudra scheme, over 563.2 million loans totalling nearly Rs 38 lakh crore have been sanctioned since April 2015, with 67 per cent going to women entrepreneurs.

Despite these achievements, Nagaraju identified several areas requiring improvement.

He emphasised the need to update Know Your Customer (KYC) details for accounts opened during the initial phase, strengthen financial literacy programs, and enhance cybersecurity measures.

Looking forward, Nagaraju outlined a three-pillar vision: ensuring financial inclusion leads to financial literacy, which in turn creates financial security through credit access, risk coverage, and pension provisions.

"If these three are able to be embedded in the financial inclusion agenda, the country is going to be much safer, much strengthened and much confident to march to the next century," he concluded.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
The numbers are impressive, no doubt. 530 million accounts is a massive achievement. But the real test is whether this inclusion translates into sustainable economic activity. Opening an account is step one; ensuring people can use it productively without falling into debt traps is the next big challenge.
A
Aman W
UPI is India's gift to the world! So proud to see our tech being discussed on global platforms. From chaiwalas to kirana stores, everyone uses it. The convenience is unbelievable. Hope the cybersecurity measures keep pace with this rapid growth.
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Sarah B
As someone who has worked with microfinance NGOs, I've seen the change firsthand. Women with Jan Dhan accounts are more likely to invest in their children's education and family nutrition. The shift from 'household money' to 'my money' for women is a powerful psychological change.
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Karthik V
Good points by Nagaraju on the need for updated KYC and financial literacy. Many accounts from 2014 are dormant or used only for direct benefit transfers. We need to convert these into active savings and investment accounts. The banking correspondent model is great, but their training is crucial.
M
Meera T
The 67% of Mudra loans to women entrepreneurs is the most heartening statistic for me. When women become earners and decision-makers, it uplifts entire communities. This is real 'Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao' in economic action. More power to our sisters! 💪

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