Aadhaar, 10 Years On: 10 highlights from the largest survey on India's unique digital identity
Dalberg, a leading social impact advisory group released the State of Aadhaar: A People's Perspective report today, showing insights that can helpdrive a data-driven discourse on Aadhaar.
The study reveals how people experience Aadhaar, a universal identity program for all residents in India - how they get it, update it, and use it across various public and private services, as well as their broader sentiments and trust in its use. Additionally, the data show which aspects of Aadhaar are working and which are not.
To know more, read the full report here.
For more information, please visit www.stateofaadhaar.in.
The research is premised on the principle that the daily users of Aadhaarare best positioned to provide valuable feedback about their lived experience -and therefore practical adjustments needed to improve Aadhaar's functioning.
The aim of this study is to augment efforts to move towards a moreeffective digital identity for all residents of India who desire it.
10 Key Findings
- Aadhaar is becoming ubiquitous in India. 95% of adults and 75% of children have Aadhaar.
- A notable minority still does not have Aadhaar. An estimated 28 million adults do not have Aadhaar, mostly in Assam and Meghalaya where enrolment has been slow due to questions about legal residency amongst others. Among vulnerable groups, a higher share of third-gender residents (30%) and people who are homeless (27%) do not have the ID.
- Updating is the hardest part of the Aadhaar process. One in five people who tried to update their Aadhaar did not succeed. 4% of Aadhaar cards currently have errors.
- Aadhaar has supported inclusion. 49% of people used Aadhaar to access one or more services like food rations, bank accounts, and social pensions for the first time. For 8% of people, Aadhaar was their first ever ID.
- Problems with Aadhaar sometimes led to denial of welfare services. 0.8% of people experienced exclusion due to Aadhaar-related reasons from a key welfare service (PDS rations, MGNREGS, social pensions) that they had earlier received (versus 3.3% due to non-Aadhaar factors).
- Aadhaar has improved service delivery. 80% feel that Aadhaar has made PDS rations, MGNREGS, or social pensions more reliable. Using Aadhaar, residents were 40% more likely to obtain a new SIM card within one day, compared to using other forms of ID.
- Despite the Supreme Court ruling, many people find Aadhaar to be de facto mandatory for bank accounts, SIM cards, and school enrolment. More than half of those who used Aadhaar to get a SIM card or bank account said that the service provider accepted only Aadhaar for identification purposes. 0.5% of 6 to 14 year olds could not enrol in school due to Aadhaar-related reasons.
- Most people appreciate Aadhaar's universal acceptance; some have concerns. 72% appreciate that it is a convenient, universal ID; nearly half of those also worry about linking it to too many services.
- Most residents are satisfied and trust Aadhaar. 92% of people are satisfied with Aadhaar. 67% of people who have been excluded from a service due to problems with Aadhaar still say they are satisfied. 90% say it keeps their data safe, while 61% say it prevents others from accessing their benefits. 8% worry about its misuse.
- Newer digital features are yet to be embraced. 77% have never used features such as mAadhaar, QR code, virtual Aadhaar or masked Aadhaar. Only 39% of residents have the correct mobile phone number linked to their Aadhaar.