Privacy is about trust between govt, people: Niti Aayog VC

Tunia Cherian Updated - January 10, 2018 at 08:57 PM.

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Privacy is all about trust between the government and people, Niti Aayog Vice-Chairman Rajiv Kumar said today while maintaining that there is hardly any privacy left the minute one uses a credit card.

He said that in today’s world even telecallers know what a person buys and what he needs.

“You got to focus on mistrust between the government and people. This is the core of all debates that are going on about privacy. I have got no privacy left ever since I got Mastercard. I get calls from telecallers who know what I buy.

“If we have any illusions about privacy, stop doing now,” Kumar said.

The Vice-Chairman of the government think-tank was speaking at a panel discussion here on various aspects of financial inclusion, which cover the JAM trinity —— the linkage of Jan Dhan bank accounts, Aadhaar ID and mobile phone numbers.

The comments come amid various petitions having been filed in the apex court challenging the government’s move making Aadhaar mandatory for availing of benefits of various social welfare schemes.

The issue got accentuated after the Supreme Court last month declared Right to Privacy a fundamental right, a far-reaching verdict that could impact a range of life choices of Indians, including food habits and sexual orientation.

Kumar said "financial inclusion has been with us for a long time, but till the current government took charge in 2014, 70 per cent of our population was unbanked".

“Financial inclusion will help in increasing household savings,” Kumar said, adding that digital push and financial inclusion is what India needs to be at the frontier of technology.

SBI Deputy Managing Director Manju Agarwal said if people can have trust in social media sites such as Facebook, Whatsapp and Google, they should trust the government on data privacy.

“Each of one in this room is on Facebook, Whatsapp and Google. Trust me, you are followed every second by these social media sites. Anybody who is concerned about privacy should not be on Facebook, Whatsapp and Google,” Agarwal noted.

She further added that digital payments would explode once smartphones reached the last mile customer.

Published on September 13, 2017 09:45