Abstract: Rural India stands at the cusp of a digital transformation in finance, propelled by innovative public infrastructure like the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), Aadhaar-enabled systems, and Business Correspondent (BC) networks. These digital tools are laying the foundation for greater financial inclusion. However, the path forward is not without obstacles: widespread connectivity gaps, limited digital and financial literacy, low trust in digital platforms, growing cybersecurity threats, and a burgeoning unregulated lending sector all pose significant regulatory challenges. Current regulatory frameworks—such as the Payments Infrastructure Development Fund, data protection norms, and pilot systems like the Unified Lending Interface (ULI)—offer promising avenues for mitigating these challenges by promoting secure, interoperable, and inclusive financial ecosystems. A strategic vision that strengthens rural connectivity, empowers local agents (e.g., BC Sakhis), enhances literacy and consumer awareness, fortifies cybersecurity and grievance mechanisms, and enforces oversight of lending platforms—while fostering open-market innovations like ONDC and digital commons—can unlock the full potential of digital finance in rural India. Through coordinated regulation and community-centric approaches, digital financial services can not only permeate underserved regions but also drive resilient and equitable development.
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Mahi R. Singh
Kunal Sinha
Sandeep Nath Sahdeo
International Journal of Latest Technology in Engineering Management & Applied Science
Birla Institute of Technology, Mesra
Birsa Agricultural University
Sarala Birla University
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Singh et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68d4539c31b076d99fa596f5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.51583/ijltemas.2025.1408000140
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