NITI Aayog’s DPI 2.0 Plan: State-Led Growth for MSMEs & Agriculture

NITI Aayog has released a detailed action plan for Digital Public Infrastructure 2.0 rollout. The plan emphasizes decentralized state-led execution with a focus on MSMEs and agriculture in the first 2026-27 cycle. It proposes two-year iterative cycles for sectoral transformations, starting with pilot projects in champion states. The goal is to accelerate India's journey towards a USD 30 trillion economy by 2047.

Key Points: NITI Aayog’s DPI 2.0: State-Led MSME & Agriculture Push

  • State-led execution key for DPI 2.0 rollout
  • Focus on MSMEs and agriculture in first 2026-27 cycle
  • Two-year iterative cycles for sectoral transformations
  • Aim to contribute 4% to GDP by 2030
  • Global engagement via neutral ecosystem body by 2027
3 min read

State-led execution, MSME and agriculture focus key to Digital Public Infrastructure 2.0 rollout: NITI Aayog

NITI Aayog outlines DPI 2.0 rollout with state-led execution, focusing on MSMEs & agriculture to drive India’s $30 trillion economy goal by 2047.

"DPI 2.0 is best advanced through decentralised state led initiatives - NITI Aayog report"

New Delhi, April 28

NITI Aayog has outlined a detailed action plan for the rollout of Digital Public Infrastructure 2.0, recommending decentralised state-led execution, sector-focused transformation cycles, and stronger global engagement to drive India's journey towards a USD 30 trillion economy by 2047.

According to the report, India's DPI initiatives are already contributing nearly 1 per cent of GDP and have the potential to reach 4 per cent by 2030, making it critical to accelerate implementation.

It stated, "DPI 2.0 is best advanced through decentralised state led initiatives with Government of India and NITI Aayog acting as catalysts".

The report emphasised that India's diversity requires localised approaches, where states and districts play a central role in building self-sustaining local economies. While states will lead execution, the Centre will support through funding, coordination, guidance, and ecosystem collaboration.

To ensure effective implementation, the report proposed adopting two-year iterative cycles for sectoral transformations. The first year of each cycle will focus on pilot projects in selected states and districts, while the second year will focus on scaling successful models and building ecosystem capacity.

This approach is aimed at creating replicable solutions and accelerating adoption across the country.

The first cycle, planned for 2026-2027, will focus on MSMEs and agriculture, identified as sectors with the highest potential for large-scale livelihood impact.

The report suggested working with six champion states or Union Territories, with each state identifying one or two districts for pilot implementation. It also recommended representation from all five regions of the country--north, south, east, west, and northeast.

The plan includes key milestones such as pilot design and rollout, demonstration of impact in selected districts, development of transformation playbooks, and expansion of successful models to at least five or more states.

To support execution, the report recommended setting up an institutional framework led by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) and NITI Aayog. This includes forming a coordination team, an expert advisory group, and engaging specialised DPI organisations to guide sectoral transformations.

It also suggested involving global partners such as development and philanthropic institutions and introducing an impact award programme to incentivise state-level outcomes.

The report further proposed establishing a neutral ecosystem body by 2027 to lead India's global engagement on DPI. This body would showcase scalable models, support implementation in other countries, and build a global collaboration platform focused on DPI and artificial intelligence for public good.

Highlighting the broader vision, the report stated that DPI 2.0 aims to move beyond basic digital access towards productivity-driven growth.

It emphasised that achieving Viksit Bharat by 2047 will depend on transforming the economy into a high-productivity engine and ensuring that digital inclusion translates into livelihoods and economic opportunity.

The report concluded that India must act with speed and coordination, leveraging its digital strengths to build a resilient and inclusive growth model that can serve as a global benchmark.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Ravi K
Good concept but implementation is the real challenge. I've seen enough government reports with great vision that never materialise on ground. Let's see if they can actually get 6 champion states to work together without political bickering. The two-year cycle idea is smart though - pilot then scale.
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Arjun K
What about internet connectivity in rural areas? DPI 2.0 is meaningless if farmers in remote villages can't access these digital services. First fix the infrastructure gaps, then rollout fancy frameworks. Otherwise it's just another Delhi-centric plan that looks good on paper.
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Priya S
As someone working with farmer producer organisations, this could be a game-changer if done right. Digital public infrastructure for agriculture means better market linkages, transparent pricing, and reduced middlemen exploitation. The global engagement part is also promising - India can lead the way in digital inclusion for development. Let's hope MeitY and NITI walk the talk.
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Suresh O
30 trillion by 2047? That's ambitious! But DPI can definitely help if we use it properly. My only worry is data privacy - with all this digital expansion, are we building strong enough safeguards? Before celebrating, let's ensure citizen data protection is priority number one. 📱🔒
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Ramesh W
Viksit Bharat vision is good but execution track record is mixed. Remember how many smart city projects remained incomplete? Let's celebrate only when farmers actually see better prices and small businesses get easier loans. Talk is cheap, delivery matters. Still, giving credit where due - at least they're thinking about states and districts this time.

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