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Lucky draw mein Rs 1 crore ka mega prize! Jeetiye 1,000 rupaiye har roz! April 2017 tak!
NITI Aayog, India’s premier government think tank and policy adviser, is promoting digital payments by announcing ‘lottery’ awards.
NITI Aayog has announced two schemes called Lucky Grahak Yojana and Digi-Dhan Yojana.
Under the schemes, consumers and merchants using UPI, RuPay cards, Aadhar-enabled and USSD-platforms are eligible for daily prizes of Rs 1,000. There are weekly draws with a maximum prize for Rs 1 lakh for consumers and Rs 50,000 for merchants.
Apart from these, a mega reward up to Rs 1 crore will be announced on 14 April 2017. Only payments above Rs 50 and below Rs 3,000 will be considered. The winners will be picked through a random selection of digital transaction IDs by the National Payment Corporation of India (NPCI), which is also the implementing authority for the scheme.
But The Quint has a few questions for NITI Aayog.
Credit cards, debit cards and e-wallets like Paytm are not included in the lucky draw scheme. But if the aim of the scheme is to encourage cashless transactions in India, why are only certain means of digital payment being incentivised?
In the weeks after demonetisation was announced, PM Modi has extolled the features of a cashless economy. But the market for digital payments includes all kinds of players, private and government. Why only promote and reward government-backed digital payment instruments?
Sarkar ka ‘cashless’ sahi, private ‘cashless’ nahi?
Across India, there are just 14 lakh point of sales or ‘card swiping’ machines in India (as of August 2016) to serve over 125 crore people. Poor internet bandwidth, connectivity and penetration is another massive hurdle. And only 17% of India owns a smartphone.
So, even if the NITI Aayog scheme does encourage people to ditch cash and ‘go digital’, the technology and infrastructure required for a large-scale cashless wave still lags way behind.
Paying digitally costs more than a cashless transaction. While the government has directed all public sector banks to lower the fees they charge for different kinds of digital transactions, digital payments do cost more than using cash. Unless that changes, a ‘lottery’ may not convince me to go ‘cashless’.
In a speech at IIT Bangalore and reported by The Economic Times, NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant said:
So, while the NITI Aayog chief has spelt out the taxation changes needed to encourage digital payments, he can’t guarantee that the 2017 Budget will actually do that, can he?
Till then, go cashless and cross your fingers. You could be the lucky winner!
(This story was originally published on 23 December 2016 and has been republished from The Quint’s archives.)
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