- BHASHINI (Bhasha Interface for India): A multilingual AI-powered language platform offering translation, speech recognition, and voice-enabled digital services across 22 Indian languages, breaking down language barriers and enabling greater digital participation.
- AI-driven Personalization and Fraud Detection: Embedded in services across healthcare, financial inclusion, and governance, AI models enable predictive analytics, user-tailored experiences, and automated compliance, enhancing service quality and security.
Oct 7, 2025
Building Inclusive Digital Futures: The Role of Digital Public Goods and Infrastructure
Oct 5, 2025
MahaAgri‑AI Policy 2025–2029
- Make Maharashtra a national and global leader in AI-enabled, farmer-centric, and sustainable agriculture.
- Address challenges like low productivity, climate risks, water scarcity, market inefficiency, and lack of real-time decision support.
- AI Integration Across the Value Chain: Adoption of AI, GenAI, drones, IoT, remote sensing, and data platforms for precision farming, crop and soil monitoring, water management, and market access.
- Digital Public Infrastructure: Launch of Agricultural Data Exchange (ADeX) for secure data sharing, an AI Sandbox for startups, and a Geospatial Intelligence Engine for climate/crop monitoring.
- Real-Time Advisory Platforms: AI-powered Multilingual “VISTAAR” platform for personalized farmer advisories, integrated with Agristack, Bhashini, and national digital assets.
- Blockchain Traceability: QR code-based blockchain systems for export crops (e.g., grapes, bananas, pomegranates) to improve food safety and trace exports.
- Support for Startups & PPPs: Grants, hackathons, open calls, and public-private partnerships to foster innovation and market-ready solutions.
- Farmer Digital Literacy: Training, fellowships, demo farms, and community outreach to ensure inclusive, confident adoption.
- Governance: Robust oversight with a State-Level Steering Committee, Technical Committee, and a dedicated AI & Agritech Innovation Centre.
- Supports national initiatives such as Agristack, Maha-Agritech, Mahavedh, CropSAPP, and Agmarknet.
- Designed to be inclusive, with special attention to reaching the last-mile farmer and ensuring ethical, responsible AI use.
- Phase I (0-3 months): Foundation and institutional setup
- Phase II (3-9 months): Pilot implementation and platform launch
- Phase III (9-12 months): Statewide scale-up
- Phase IV (12-36 months): Consolidation and policy evolution
- Digital Infrastructure: ₹50 crore
- AI Projects Support: ₹350 crore
- Innovation Centre Setup: ₹30 crore
- Capacity Building: ₹50 crore
- Global Conference/Summit: ₹20 crore
Oct 3, 2025
Books that Shape Ideas: Economics and Public Policy on The Seen and the Unseen Podcast
"The Seen and the Unseen" is India's premier long-form podcast hosted by Amit Varma. The podcast, which has been running since 2017, features long-form conversations with intellectuals, writers, economists, historians, and thought leaders from India and around the world. The podcast is highly recommended to the readers for deep dive into diverse topics with subject matter experts.
- In Service of the Republic — Vijay Kelkar & Ajay Shah
- India’s Big Government: The Intrusive State & How It’s Hurting Us — Vivek Kaul
- Samaaj, Sarkaar, Bazaar: A Citizen-First Approach — Rohini Nilekani
- The Lost Decade (2008-18): How India’s Growth Story Devolved into Growth Without a Story — Puja Mehra
- The Third Pillar: How Markets and the State Leave the Community — Raghuram Rajan
- Easy Money series (3 volumes) — Vivek Kaul
- Between the Buyer and the Seller — Karthik Shashidhar
- Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology — Chris Miller
- Where India Goes: Abandoned Toilets, Stunted Development and the Costs of Caste — Diane Coffey
- Austrian Economics: An Introduction — Steven Horwitz
- Friedrich Hayek: The Ideas and Influence of the Libertarian Economist — Eamonn Butler
- The Mystery of Capital — Hernando De Sotov
- Where Are the Customers’ Yachts? — Fred Schwed Jr.
- Free to Choose — Milton Friedman & Rose Friedman
- A Theory of Justice — John Rawls
- Capitalism and Freedom — Milton Friedman
- Individualism and Economic Order — Friedrich Hayek
- The Road to Serfdom — Friedrich Hayek
- Economics in One Lesson — Henry Hazlitt
- The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money — John Maynard Keynes
- Public Opinion — Walter Lippmann
- Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market — Walter Bagehot
- The Wealth of Nations — Adam Smith
- The Theory of Moral Sentiments — Adam Smith
Sep 29, 2025
Book Recommendations by Nikhil Kamath - WTF Podcast
WTF is a podcast series where entrepreneur and Investor Nikhil Kamath hosts friends and industry experts and holds casual yet intellectually stimulating conversations. WTF Podcast is a must-listen for aspiring entrepreneurs, startup founders, stock market investors, early-career professionals, business students, and young professionals eager to understand wealth creation, financial markets, and unconventional thinking.
Nikhil Kamath’s book recommendations focus on cultivating a mindset of continuous learning, financial literacy, and strategic thinking. Based on my research of Nikhil Kamath's WTF podcast series, here's a comprehensive collection of book recommendations that have emerged from his conversations and personal recommendations:
- Freedom from the Known by Jiddu Krishnamurti – Breaking mental conditioning and achieving true freedom
- The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel – Behavioral influences on financial decisions and money mindset
- The Denial of Death by Ernest Becker – Fear of mortality driving human behavior and accomplishments
- When Genius Failed by Roger Lowenstein – Collapse of a hedge fund, lessons on overconfidence and failures
- The Compound Effect by Darren Hardy – Small, consistent actions leading to significant long-term success
- A History of Western Philosophy by Bertrand Russell – Comprehensive overview of Western philosophical schools and thought
- Atomic Habits by James Clear – Systematic approach for building good habits and breaking bad ones
- Meditations by Marcus Aurelius – Stoic wisdom on resilience, discipline, and personal leadership growth
- Caste by Isabel Wilkerson – Examination of caste systems and social hierarchies globally
- Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari – Human history is shaped by revolutions in cognition and society
- Source Code by Bill Gates – Insights on technology innovation, philanthropy, and global challenges
Sep 23, 2025
Think School’s Book Recommendations
Think School is an outstanding podcast and YouTube channel for anyone passionate about business, strategy, and management for current MBA students, MAT & CAT aspirants, and professionals in the making. Learners get actionable frameworks on business models, startup journeys, culture building, product-market fit, and competitive strategy directly from those who have built and scaled companies.
The Think School Podcast simplifies complex topics in business, geopolitics, and leadership through engaging storytelling and real-world case studies. Think School recommends the following books that focus on leadership, business mindset, and productivity for personal and professional growth:
Leadership and Purpose
- Start with Why by Simon Sinek on Leadership rooted in purpose
- Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg on the challenges women face in leadership
- The Almanack of Naval Ravikant by Eric Jorgenson on Wealth and Wisdom
- Culture Code by Daniel Coyle on Unlocking high-performing teams
- This Is Marketing by Seth Godin on Purposeful marketing philosophy
- Jab Jab Jab Right Hook by Gary Vaynerchuk on Social Media Storytelling
- Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss on Negotiation Mastery
- Pre-suasion by Robert Cialdini on the Art of influence and persuasion
- Shoe Dog by Phil Knight is the Memoir of Nike’s founding journey
- Deep Work by Cal Newport on Focused productivity
- Atomic Habits by James Clear on Systematic habit building
- Hooked by Nir Eyal on Building habit-forming products
- The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel on the psychological foundation for financial success
- Factfulness by Hans Rosling — A fact-based worldview to understand global progress.
- Black Sheep by Brant Menswar — Empowering stories about finding your unique voice.
- Can't Hurt Me by David Goggins — Overcoming limits through mental toughness and resilience.
- Meditations by Marcus Aurelius — Stoic wisdom for modern life grounded in mindfulness.
- Essentialism by Greg McKeown — The disciplined pursuit of less for a meaningful life.
Sep 7, 2025
Why Government Schemes Fail? - 3
Over ten years and countless reflections, the third part of "Why Government Schemes Fail?" explores why government schemes often fail at the grassroots level. The first and second of "Why Government Schemes Fail" can be accessed.
Government schemes are essential tools aimed at uplifting vulnerable populations and promoting inclusive growth. Yet many schemes fall short of their intended outcomes due to a complex mixture of design flaws, governance shortcomings, and operational inefficiencies. Good policy, like good literature, takes personal lived experience as its starting point.
Let me start with Scheme Design: The Blueprint for Success or Failure. Policy design is inseparable from governance outcomes. Schemes structured with complex rules, poor monitoring, unclear eligibility criteria, or ambiguous grievance mechanisms open doors to inefficiencies and corruption. Government schemes often lack transparency while in the design. Greater openness and participation before launching schemes can ensure better planning and public trust.
Bringing together insights from practical experience, internet research, and foundational economic policy thought leaders like Vijay L. Kelkar and Ajay Shah, please find some insights:
1. Leakage (Inclusion Errors): When benefits reach ineligible individuals, wasting scarce resources and weakening political support for programs. Governments often focus on reducing leakages because they represent immediate financial losses and corruption.
2. Exclusion Errors: When eligible individuals remain unserved due to bureaucratic failures and lack of social awareness which hurts the very citizens these schemes intend to help.
3. Poor state capacity means that government institutions struggle to properly plan, carry out, and track policies. Indian states face challenges like excessive power in hand of the few skilled bureaucrats, lack of technical staff, and very poor institutional memory.
4. Many poorly paid ad hoc staff and officials juggling multiple tasks reduce the overall effectiveness of government. Additionally, frontline workers are often overworked with high workloads, which strains their ability to perform efficiently and weaken government service delivery.
6. Weak incentives for better work hinder efficient government service delivery. Issues like poor monitoring of vendors and delays in payments reduce motivation for timely and quality performance.
7. Poor public procurement procedures in the government add to inefficiencies and reduce accountability. Complex, inconsistent, and bureaucratic procurement rules limit competition, cause delays, and enable corruption through practices like favoritism, bid-rigging, and limited vendor participation.
8. Elite capture of public policy and bureaucratic dominance in decision-making lead to the control of resources and benefits to serve their own interests. Powerful local elites often sideline the poor, which fosters corruption. The corrupt money is then transferred back to the elites and bureaucrats, perpetuating the cycle.
9. Insufficient integration across government departments leads to siloed implementation. Schemes are often designed for the convenience of departments rather than focusing on the needs of the users.
10. Schemes do not operate in an apolitical vacuum. Political incentives often favor launching high-visibility programs over investing in challenging, long-term institutional strengthening.
11. Especially, there is an 'ABCD' culture from top to bottom in rights-based services—A stands for Avoid, B for Bypass, C for Confuse, and D for Delay.
No amount of sensitization can hope to overcome resistance from vested interests. be it of a financial, power, or political nature. The government scheme is doomed to fail but those who have designed the scheme will not be made to own the responsibility for its failures. In conclusion, it is important to approach case studies based on "success stories" with caution, as they often emphasize positive outcomes while overlooking challenges. There is a lot of talk about an ‘action-oriented government,’ but it often involves dramatic announcements praised by a media that rarely asks follow-up questions.
Aug 30, 2025
Empowering Development Sector Professionals through online learning platforms
Learning is unlikely to take place without first engaging the learner’s desire to learn - Peter Senge.
In these transformative times, staying competitive requires acquiring relevant and new-age skills. I am committed to ensuring that my team remains ahead of their learning curve, especially as they take on new roles and responsibilities after promotions. Developing a thoughtful inventory of skills allows for effective hiring and performance evaluation. Investing in skills is essential for upgrading self into a future-fit workforce. In short, learning is as passive as learning to play chess.
As a rural manager, I recognize the importance of continuously upgrading skills across a broad spectrum—from technical areas like agricultural practices and data management to essential soft skills such as communication, leadership, and compliance. Online courses provide the flexibility to learn at our own pace and schedule, enabling us to balance learning with our demanding work in the field. I will recommend and explain the rationale behind the following online courses tailored for rural management students, development sector professionals and Government & Public Sector Consultants:
1. Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) and Good (DPG) for Impact: Learn how digital infrastructure can be leveraged to create scalable, inclusive solutions for the public service delivery.
2. AI For Everyone: Understand introductory AI concepts to apply emerging technologies in development programs and prompts.
3. The Economics of Agro-Food Value Chains: Gain knowledge on the Agri-Food Value chain, improving its competitiveness, producing high quality food and products and aiming to attain greater sustainability.
4. Microsoft Power BI Desktop for Business Intelligence: Acquire data visualization skills to analyze the datasets and presentation skills.
5. Business Case for Corporate Sustainability: Explore how sustainable business practices create long-term value for organizations and communities.
6. Microsoft Excel: Data Analysis with Excel Pivot Tables: Master pivot tables in Excel to efficiently summarize and analyze large data sets, enhancing reporting accuracy and insight.
Apr 6, 2024
Caste Census and Public Policy
Dec 20, 2023
A note on Public Procurement
Oct 9, 2022
Agriculture and Colonialization
Post-1833 slavery abolition, British Caribbean planters imported over 1.5 million Indians from 1838 onward to replace freed Africans who refused low-wage plantation work, recruiting via promises of pay (about 1 shilling daily for men) and eventual repatriation. Chinese workers from southern provinces arrived as indentured laborers starting in the 1840s, with around 18,000 entering British colonies such as Guyana (over 15,000), Trinidad, Jamaica, and later Cuba under Spanish rule.
British colonies even recruited Portuguese from carribbean as contract laborers for sugar estates amid labor shortages. Unlike slaves, indentured labours had contract endpoints and repatriation rights (rarely exercised), yet conditions mimicked bondage with barracoons and whippings. A brief account of the history of slavery in plantation agriculture can be read here.
Jun 17, 2022
What ails Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVKs)?
Apr 7, 2022
List of Resource Institutions working in FPO ecosystem
- Access Development Services
- Access Livelihoods Consulting
- Action for Agricultural Renewal in Maharashtra (AFARM), Pune
- Action for Food Production (AFPRO)
- Action for Social Advancement (ASA)
- AFC INDIA LIMITED
- Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRSP)
- BAIF Institute for Sustainable Livelihoods and Development
- Basix Krishi Samruddhi Limited
- Bhartiya Sammrudhi Investments and Consulting Services Limited (BASICS)
- Centre for Sustainable Agriculture (CSA)
- Centre of Agriculture and Rural Developments (CARD)
- CTRAN Consulting Limited
- Dhan Foundation
- Dvara Trust
- Ek Lavya Foundation
- Harsha Trust
- Heifer India
- Indian Farm Forestry Dev. Co-operative Ltd. (IFFDC)
- Indian Grameen Services (IGS)
- Indian Institute of Millet Research (IIMR), Hyderabad
- Indian Society of Agribusiness Professionals (ISAP)
- Indo Global Social Service Society
- KRISHI VIKAS SAHAKARI SAMITI LTD. (KVSS)
- Lupin Human Welfare & Research Foundation
- Madhya Bharat Consortium of Farmers Producer Co Ltd.
- Maha Farmers Producer Company (MAHA FPC), Pune
- Mart Global Management Solutions LLP
- NABCONS
- Pragya
- Professional Assistance for Development Action (PRADAN)
- Sahyadri Community Development and Women Empowerment Society
- Sesta Development Services
- Sheel Biotech Limited
- Solidaridad Regional Expertise Centre
- Srijan India
- Synergy Technofin Pvt Ltd.
- Tanager
- Technoserve
- Vrutti
Jan 24, 2022
Links to important Documents & Information on the Farmer Producer Organizations
5. Farmer Friendly Handbook For Schemes & Programmes
7. Live Quotes of Future Prices of Commodities
8. Circular on Early Pay-in Facility for Farmer Producer Organization (FPO)
9. Plan for utilization of regulatory fees foregone by SEBI
11. State-wise List of the Warehouses Registered with WDRA
Dec 13, 2021
International Placement of Indian workforce
At present, developed countries don’t have the demographics to support their labor market and will need to depend on the rest of the world. India has a working population of 400.7 million with a thriving education sector. India’s demographic dividend can be leveraged to meet the requirements of developed countries across diverse sectors. For the last 30 years or so, India’s youth have been part of the workforce across the Middle East, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
Yet the proportion of formally skilled workers in India is extremely low, at 4.69% of the total workforce, compared to 24% in China, 52% in the US, 68% in the UK, 75% in Germany, 80% in Japan, and 96% in South Korea. Hence, the skills ecosystem should not only cater to the existing Indian industry requirements but should have a definite room for the international placement of the Indian workforce. Changing the employment landscape post-COVID-19 has led to a rise in both onsite and remote work.
The nearest European country is more than 4300 km away from India. This distance from Europe is one reason why a significant proportion of migration from India takes place to countries like the UAE, Malaysia, etc.
The Indian government has taken notable initiatives including MoUs with developed economies on labor mobility, e-Migrate, Indian Community Welfare Fund, Pravasi Bharatiya Sahayata Kendras, and Pre-Departure Orientation Programmes. The proposed Emigration Bill, 2021 will constitute the core of enabling framework for institutional support.
Suggestions for International Placement
1. NSDC is making efforts to align and recognize the Indian Occupational Qualifications Training and Certification at the destination countries. This is a long-term effort to match NSQF-level corresponding job roles in both countries. A unified system for formalizing a variety of skills acquired through both formal and informal learning should also be mapped to the European Qualification Framework (EQF).
2. The better approach will be creating assessment and certification centers in accordance with standards recognition of awarding bodies of destination countries. Presently, only Singapore has testing centers in India where candidates interested in migrating to the nation can get their applications processed and skills verified locally instead of flying to Singapore for the attestation and recognition of skills.
2. There must be the creation of the TVET (technical and vocational education and training) programs with an Indian partner for the implementation and a foreign entity as a knowledge partner. This will ensure the quality of the curriculum with a lower cost of operations. The pricing pressure on such TVET programs will be huge as Indian universities are offering similar courses in vocational studies. TVET program must ensure good placement as the cost incurred by the candidates must be recoverable within 2-3 years post the course completion.
3. Any TVET program offering global certification to the candidates must lead a clear path to global exposure. This can be done either through apprenticeship or an opportunity to study/upskill in the destination countries.
4. Poor knowledge of the language of the destination countries creates a major gap between the aspiration of youth and the reality on the ground. Skill development programs and language training programs must be linked to the formal education system through a unified skills and education qualification framework. This will change the negative public perception of TVET courses.
5. JIM Japan India Institute for Manufacturing - Japanese companies in India are also supporting young Indian talent in acquiring the concepts and skills of Japanese manufacturing by using existing factories and facilities to develop future shop floor leaders. Such an arrangement can be extended with MNCs operating in diverse sectors.
6. Migration of students to study in destination countries can help build skills that may otherwise be difficult to acquire in India. The mobility of students should be promoted and pathways must be explored for their stay as a workforce in destination countries.
Aug 17, 2021
Direct Benefit Transfer - G2C in India
- To further expand the reach of such digital payment programs, banking infrastructure needs to be enhanced by ensuring sufficient bank branches, banking correspondents, the post office, and Common Services Centres to make it easier for citizens to access payments to them.
- Rural customers typically maintain low bank balances, are geographically spread out, and have low transaction volumes. Given the low levels of women's digital engagement, easy access to banking infrastructure for cash in-cash out services remains a necessary condition to enable. However, the private banking correspondent business model has chronically suffered from low profitability and a high level of agent attrition on account of unattractive remuneration.
- DBT eliminates inordinate delays, multiple channels & paperwork involved in the existing system.
- This is a better way to help the poor than providing them under-priced grain, fuel, and essential public services. A poor household with cash via DBT can access and choose a private-sector provider and not just be dependent on a monopolistic government provider.
- Targeting the poorest has the obvious advantage since the marginal value of money is highest since they have the least money.
- The per-person costs of delivering transfers have fallen rapidly in many places due to advances in last-mile digital payment infrastructure.
- The DBT model has been seen as a substitute for state action. The state has to build implementation capacity and grievance redressal mechanisms as many beneficiaries are used to interacting with frontline workers or local government officials for scheme-related grievances.
- While it may not be mandatory to link an Aadhaar Card with a bank account, for now, it appears that there is no escaping the process. Aadhaar seeding is necessitated for receiving Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT). This protocol followed by government officials has led to an increase in exclusion errors, denying genuine beneficiaries their entitlements.
- DBT system has no mechanism to strengthen transparency and accountability at the local level. Technical errors such as age, spelling, and a host of other data points plague the system. People with incorrect names, and mismatching dates of birth, end up unable to avail of any welfare scheme that they are otherwise eligible for.
- There has been an assumption that the economy will become burdened with these schemes leading to inflation and price distortion. Data again does not support this argument as it showed better economic participation and thus a net boost to the local economies where the schemes were implemented. DBT can be indexed to adjust with inflation.
- Complexity increases if Aadhaar is seeded in multiple bank accounts of beneficiaries. There are several cases like the money transferred to account holders died a few years back, and money could not get transferred due to the closure of accounts which are issues to be resolved with NPCI and banks.








