Several departments in many states of India are far behind in their digitisation goals.
Because they want to keep avenues of corruption open.
The one that comes to mind is mutation of land type- very easily implementable solution, but it remains traditional, not analog.
Digitization does not do away with corruption. One example is the drivers' license office. There are "brokers" who take non-trivial "fees" so that you pass your driving tests and you do not face any hindrances or waste your time by having to go many times for a single task. The officers take cuts from these brokers.
Without them, only local people with no value of time will be able to get drivers' license.
There are also road signs tests. While hard for many, I found it trivially easy.
Because they want to keep avenues of corruption open.
The one that comes to mind is mutation of land type- very easily implementable solution, but it remains traditional, not analog.
Digitization does not do away with corruption. One example is the drivers' license office. There are "brokers" who take non-trivial "fees" so that you pass your driving tests and you do not face any hindrances or waste your time by having to go many times for a single task. The officers take cuts from these brokers.
Without them, only local people with no value of time will be able to get drivers' license.
There are also road signs tests. While hard for many, I found it trivially easy.