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1.
PREAMBLE
2. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ACTION PLAN
Introduction
Info-Infrastructure Drive
Target ITEX - 50
IT for all by 2008
3. ANNEXURE
Notification : Appointment of Taskforce
List of Co-Opted Members
PREAMBLE
In the history of civilisation, no work of science has so
comprehensively impacted on the course of human development
as Information Technology (IT). Undoubtedly, IT has been the
greatest change agent of this century and promises to play
this role even more dramatically in the coming decades. IT
is changing every aspect of human life - communications, trade,
manufacturing, services, culture, entertainment, education,
research, national defence and global security. IT is breaking
old barriers and building new interconnections in the emerging
Global Village. IT has also become the chief determinant of
the progress of nations, communities and individuals.
For India, the rise of Information Technology is an opportunity
to overcome historical disabilities and once again become
the master of one's own national destiny. IT is a tool that
will enable India to achieve the goal of becoming a strong,
prosperous and self-confident nation. In doing so, IT promises
to compress the time it would otherwise take for India to
advance rapidly in the march of development and occupy a position
of honor and pride in the comity of nations.
The Government of India has recognised the potential of Information
Technology for rapid and all-round national development. The
National Agenda for Governance, which is the Government's
policy blueprint, has taken due note of the Information and
Communication Revolution that is sweeping the globe. Accordingly,
it has mandated the Government to take necessary policy and
programmatic initiatives that would facilitate India's emergence
as an Information Technology Superpower in the shortest possible
time.
This commitment to Information and Communication Technology
in the National Agenda for Governance has been forcefully
articulated by Prime Minister Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee on
a number of occasions. In his first televised addresss to
the Nation on March 25, the Prime Minister declared that promotion
of Information Technology would be one of his Government's
five top priorities.
In his speech at the CII Annual Session on April 28, 1998,
the Prime Minister said: "This is one area where India can
quickly establish global dominance. India can be fully competitive
in this area with tremendous pay-offs in terms of wealth creation
and generation of high quality employment".
The Prime Minister announced at the CII Annual Session the
Government's resolve to set up, within 30 days, a National
Task Force on Information Technology, which would formulate
the draft National Informatics Policy.
Accordingly, the Office of the Prime Minister issued a Notification
on 22nd May, 1998 constituting a National Task Force on Information
Technology and Software Development. This Task Force is chaired
by Shri Jaswant Singh, Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission
and co-chaired by Shri N. Chandrababu Naidu, Chief Minister
of Andhra Pradesh and Dr. M. G. K. Menon, former Minister
of State for Science and Technology. Its members include eminent
representatives from the Government, industry and academia.
The Prime Minister has given five main tasks and 15 terms
of reference to the IT Task Force (see Annexure). The tasks
include recommending, within one month, immediate steps that
the Government needs to take to remove bottlenecks in the
path of rapid development of IT in India and give a big boost
to Indian IT and software industry.
The Task Force has completed its deliberations on this immediate
task and is pleased to submit its first report to the Prime
Minister. This report, called the Information Technology Action
Plan, contains 108 recommendations covering both bottleneck
areas and broad promotional measures that are crucial for
boosting IT in India.
These recommendations cover a wide spectrum of issues relating
to telecommunications, finance, banking, revenue, commerce,
electronics, human resource development, defence and rural
development. They address critical national needs in the areas
of information infrastructure, Internet access, software development
and exports, hardware manufacture, electronic commerce, R&D
in IT, manpower training and education.
Software exports has received much attention of the Task Force.
Recognising India's competitive advantage in this area, the
Action Plan has made many recommendations aimed at enabling
Indian exporters to capture a large share of the global software
market in a short time.
A unique promotional campaign suggested in the report is OPERATION
KNOWLEDGE, which aims at universalising IT and IT-based education
at all levels of the education pyramid in India.
A notable feature of these recommendations is the conscious
effort of the Task Force to give Information Technology a
pro-people and pro-development thrust. These recommendations
flow from a perspective that India can become a strong IT
power only if information technology reaches out to the masses
in rural areas and in small towns and if its use in Indian
languages can also be given major encouragement.
Taken together, the recommendations in the Information Technology
Action Plan significantly broaden and deepen the process of
economic reforms by encouraging competition, entrepreneurship
and innovation -- the three principles which are cardinal
for India's progress in the emerging knowledge-driven global
economy.
The Task Force is confident that the implementation of these
recommendations will send a strong signal to people within
India and abroad that India can swiftly ride on the Information
Superhighway.
Activities of the Task Force till date
The Office of the Prime Minister issued a Notification on
22nd May 1998 constituting a National Task Force on Information
Technology and Software Development. Dr. M.G.K. Menon, Co-Chairperson
of the Task Force, Dr. N. Seshagiri, Member-Convener, and
Shri Sudheendra Kulkarni of the PMO met Shri Jaswant Singh,
Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission and Chairperson of the
Task Force on 26th May 1998 for finalising the guidelines
regarding the deliberations of the Task Force.
The Task Force created a Web Site on the Internet, with a
web-letter from the Chairman, inviting suggestions from IT
professionals around the world. On the basis of a number of
useful reports on the topic prepared earlier by various organisations
like the Planning Commission, Ministry of Commerce, Department
of Electronics, NIC, Government of Andhra Pradesh, as well
as industry associations like NASSCOM, MAIT and ESC and the
suggestions given by the various members of the Task Force,
the Member-Convener prepared a Basic Background Report (BR-1)
and hoisted the same on the Web. More than 3,000 suggestions
have been received on the Web from IT professionals around
the world.
The Task Force held a number of preparatory meetings, and
several formal and informal meetings with the Ministers concerned
and their Secretaries and senior officials as per the following
schedule:
26 May, 1998 : Meeting with the Deputy Chairman,Planning Commission
& Chair-person of the Task Force
12, 13 & 15 June 1998 : Preparatory meetings in New Delhi
under the chairmanship of Professor M.G.K. Menon, Co-Chairperson
of the Task Force
16 June 1998 : Meeting in the Department of Telecommunication
18 June 1998 : Meeting with the Chief Minister of Maharashtra,
senior officials of the State Government and scientists and
academicians and industry representatives in Mumbai
20 June 1998 : Meeting with the Wireless Adviser, Government
of India
22 & 23 June 1998 : Meeting with the Minister for Communications
23 June 1998 : Meeting with Chairman, Telecom Commission
24 June 1998 : Meeting with Scientific Adviser to Raksha Mantri
& Secretary, Defence (Research)
25 June 1998 : Meeting with Finance Minister
25 June 1998 : Meeting with Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh
& Co-Chairperson of the Task Force
26 June 1998 : Meeting with Finance Secretary
27 June 1998 : Meeting with Finance Secretary
29 June 1998 : Meeting with Finance Secretary
July 1, 1998 : Meeting with Finance Minister
July 1, 1998 : Meeting with Wireless Adviser & Defence
Ministry officials
This is the first time in India that representatives of so
many ministries, departments, industry associations, business
houses, educational institutions and State Governments interacted
so intensively and in such a short period of time to cover
so many bottleneck and promotional areas in Information Technology.
It is also the first time that agreement was reached and concurrence
received on most of the points in the Action Plan. This, the
Task Force believes, augurs well for its early and effective
implementation.
Future Activities
After submission of the first report on bottleneck and immediate
promotional issues, the Task Force will begin work on the
more substantive work of formulating the draft National Informatics
Policy. Towards this end, it will soon set up Working Groups
on various specific subjects, on which representatives from
Government, industry, academia and other sections of society
from across the country will be represented. A few of the
Working Groups have already started their work.
The Task Force also plans to identify a large number of national
missions which will be so designed as to make visible and
catalytic impact on the use of IT in India.
In order to broadbase its consultations, the Task Force has
drawn up a plan to visit Bangalore, Hyderabad, Calcutta and
Guwahati in the coming weeks. It has already held one such
meeting in Mumbai on June 18, 1998.
Within the next ten days, the Task Force will prepare a Vision
Statement whose aim will be to excite and energize the people
of India, creating the faith in them that Information Technology
vitally aids personal growth and national growth. It will
also embark on an awareness creation strategy for the effective
articulation and dissemination of that Vision.
The Information Technology Action Plan follows.
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ACTION PLAN
Introduction
The Government of India, recognising that the impressive growth
the country has achieved since the mid-Eighties in Information
Technology is still a small proportion of the potential to
achieve, has resolved to make India a Global IT Superpower
and a front-runner in the age of Information Revolution. The
Government of India considers IT as an agent of transformation
of every facet of human life which will bring about a knowledge
based society in the twenty-first century. As a first step
in that direction, the following revisions and additions are
made to the existing Policy and Procedures for removing bottlenecks
and achieving such a pre-eminent status for India.
The revisions and additions are aimed at accomplishing the
following basic objectives:
i) Info-Infrastructure Drive: Accelerate the drive for setting
up a World class Info Infrastructure with an extensive spread
of Fibre Optic Networks, Satcom Networks and Wireless Networks
for seamlessly interconnecting the Local Informatics Infrastructure
(LII), National Informatics Infrastructure (NII) and the Global
Informatics Infrastructure (GII) to ensure a fast nation-wide
onset of the INTERNET, EXTRANETs and INTRANETs.
ii) Target ITEX - 50: With a potential 2 trillion dollar Global
IT industry by the year 2008, policy ambiance will be created
for the Indian IT industry to target for a $ 50 billion annual
export of IT Software and IT Services (including IT-enabled
services) by this year, over a commensurately large domestic
IT market spread all over the country.
iii) IT for all by 2008: Accelerate the rate of PC / set-top-box
penetration in the country from the 1998 level of one per
500 to one per 50 people along with a universal access to
Internet / Extranets/ Intranets by the year 2008, with a flood
of IT applications encompassing every walk of economic and
social life of the country. The existing over 600,000 Public
Telephones / Public Call Offices (PCOs) will be transformed
into public tele-info- centres offering a variety of multimedia
Information services. Towards the goal of IT for all by 2008,
policies are provided for setting the base for a rapid spread
of IT awareness among the citizens, propagation of IT literacy,
networked Government, IT-led economic development, rural penetration
of IT applications, training citizens in the use of day-to-day
IT services like tele-banking, tele-medicine, tele-education,
tele-documents transfer, tele-library, tele-info-centres,
electronic commerce, Public Call Centres, among others; and
training, qualitatively and quantitatively, world class IT
professionals.
Info-Infrastructure Drive
With a target of 30 percent of annual growth rate from the
1998 level of Fibre Optic backbone of 75,000 route kilometers,
VSATs of aggregate capacity of over 300 Megabit Per Second,
Satellite Transponders of aggregate capacity of more than
3000 Megahertz and in the corresponding 'last mile' Wireless
Communication as well as Data Communication based value added
services, the Data and Multimedia Info-Infrastructure Policies
are liberalised as under:
(1) INTERNET access nodes will be opened by DoT and authorised
ISPs at all District Headquarters and local charging areas
by 26th January 2000. As an interim measure, and till nodes
are provided in all local charging areas, access to nearest
INTERNET access nodes will be on local call rates with effect
from 15th August 1998. ISPs will be responsible for ensuring
that this facility is not misused for telephone traffic.
(2) Voice & Data Communication is permitted for IT Software
Development and IT Services on dedicated or leased circuits,
but no telephone traffic is permitted. Surcharge on 64 Kbps
and higher capacity circuits for voice-cum-data applications
is withdrawn with effect from 15th August 1998.
(3) Doubling of the lease rental charged by DOT for high speed
data circuits leased by Closed User Group (CUG), Licensees
of Basic Service, Cellular Service and other Value Added Services
and users shall be reduced to single normal lease rental charge.
(4) Requests made by public sector Software Technology Park
(STPs) or Private Sector STPs or IT promotional organisations
approved by the Government for release of bandwidth shall
be acted upon by the VSNL by intimating INTELSAT within two
weeks of receipt.
(5) Setting up of Central call centres by IT Service Providers
shall be permitted for which DOT and other Basic telecom Service
Providers will make available bandwidth.
(6) Intelligent Network (IN) Services including free phone
and premium Service (e.g. 1-800 and 1-900) Services shall
be introduced by DoT by 31 December 1998 in several cities
over an Intelligent Network (IN) Platform.
(7) For setting up ISP Operations by companies, there shall
be no license fee for first five years and after five years
a nominal license fee of one rupee will be charged.
(8) The monopoly of the VSNL on International Gateway for
INTERNET shall be withdrawn and authorised public/government
organisations will be allowed to provide INTERNET Gateway
access directly without going through VSNL Gateways. Private
ISPs are allowed to provide such Gateways after obtaining
Defence clearance. Suitable monitoring mechanisms will be
put in place to take care of security considerations.
(9) The Railways, Defence, State Electricity Boards, National
Power Grid Corporation as well as organisations like ONGC,
GAIL and SAIL who have rights of way shall be allowed to host
fibre optic backbone. These organisations shall be allowed
to provide service to the public based on this backbone by
having an interface with the existing or new public networks,
but without necessarily having to go through DOT network.
(10) Networks such as NICNET, STPs, as well as private networks
shall be allowed inter-connectivity without necessarily having
to go through the DoT's INET network.
(11) Providing access to INTERNET through authorised Cable
TV shall be permitted to any service provider without additional
licensing.
(12) The 'last mile' linkages shall be freely permitted either
by fibre optic or radio communication for IT application enterprises,
IT promotional organisations and ISPs. In case of radio linkages,
coordination by the Wireless Adviser will be observed to avoid
frequency interference.
(13) The radio frequency band in the range of 2.4 - 2.483
GHz shall be open as 'public wireless' for any Government
organisation or PSU or Private Sector Company to set up Spread
Spectrum based non-interference type Wireless data/multimedia
communication equipment subject to a maximum of 4 Watt EIRP;
WPC will periodically issue a district-wise directory of two
or three selected subbands of 10 MHz each for each of the
districts on the criteria of least congestion and reserve
these subbands maximally for the exclusive use of Spread Spectrum
Communication as above. The use of the band will be on the
basis of non-interference, non-protection and non-exclusiveness.
Private sector, Public sector and Government operators shall
bilaterally obtain Defence Clearance for location, the area
covered and the frequency sub-band: The Private Sector Units
will be required to obtain MHA clearance directly; The security
agencies shall convey their decision within 30 days of application
failing which the application would be deemed to have been
cleared from the security angle; If cleared, the Private and
Public Sector operators shall be required to obtain a registration
and automatic license directly from WPC by producing the copies
of security clearances; the Government operators will directly
register with WPC; WPC will be empowered to monitor the violation
of the above conditions and impose penalties on defaulters
in three stages: Written warning, monetary penalty and debarring
for two years. A Public Wireless Technical Audit Unit comprising
a representative each from the Defence, DOT, NIC and from
NASSCOM for the limited purpose of representing private user
interests, shall monitor the implementation of the above policy
(14) Data communication requirements for Electronic Commerce
(EC/EDI) shall be met by DoT in a liberal framework by assigning
the highest priority under their priority classification if
the EC/EDI requirement is certified by authorities in Government
authorised by the Ministry of Commerce.
(15) Public TeleInfo Centres (PTIC) having multimedia capability
specially ISDN Services, Remote Database Access, Government
and Community Information systems, Market Information, Desk
Top Videoconferencing, TeleInfo and INTERNET/Web Access Services
shall be permitted and encouraged by the Government. DoT and
other Basic Service Providers, Value Added Service Providers
and authorised IT promotional organisations shall be permitted
to promote these services on non-exclusive basis. No license
fee will be charged for operating these services and the usual
tariff, where applicable, will be payable by the PTIC Service
providers/franchisees. Efforts will be made by DoT and other
Service Providers to upgrade STD/ISD PCOs to convert them
into these powerful PTICs for which ISDN or other digital
facilities shall be provided on priority without necessarily
having to make additional investment on this account.
(16) DOT shall take suitable action to delicense Multimedia
services, including FAX, provided by PCOs.
(17) To enhance the pace of PC and INTERNET penetration in
remote and far flung areas in the country, the Defence Services
shall enable provisions of connectivity for ciivilian applications
to their communication backbone.
(18) Existing Software Centres by themselves may not be able
to fulfill the high targets now set for the IT industry by
the year 2008. International experience has shown that hi-tech
industries flourish essentially in the rural hinterland adjacent
to cities with modern telecom and communication infrastructure
and top class hi-tech educational/research institutions. India
will promote such 'Hi-tech Habitats' in the rural hinterland
adjacent to suitable cities. For this purpose suitable autonomous
structures will be designed and progressive regulations will
be framed to facilitate infrastructurally self-contained self-financed
Hi-Tech Habitats of high quality. Initially, five such Hi-Tech
Habitats shall be planned and implemented in the rural hinterland
of the cities: Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, Delhi and Bhubaneswar.
It is estimated that progressively 50 such Hi-Tech Habitats
can be viably set up by empowering the State Governments to
autonomously nucleate them within a technologically progressive
and administratively liberal set of guidelines to be prepared
by a special Working Group on Hi-Tech IT Habitats to be set
up by the Task Force.
Target ITEX - 50
For creating a congenial ambiance for exporters of IT Software
and IT Services (including IT enabled services) to reach the
export target of US $ 50 billion by the year 2008, the following
incentives shall be provided:
(19) (a) Definition: "IT Software" means any representation
of instructions, data, sound or image, including source code
and object code, recorded in a machine readable form, and
capable of being manipulated or providing interactivity to
a user, by means of an automatic data processing machine falling
under heading 'IT Products', but does not include 'non-IT
products'. 'IT service' is defined as any service which results
from the use of any IT software over a system of IT products
for realising value addition. The term 'IT Industry' shall
cover development, production and services related to IT Products.
The term 'IT Software' shall be substituted in place of 'Computer
Software' in all notifications.
(b) Finance Ministry (CBEC) shall
introduce a new classification called, 'Information Technology
(IT) Products' including Computer, Digital/Data communication
and Digital/Data Broadcasting products, by recognising the
progressive technological convergence of these three categories
and in line with the classification list in Attachment A (Section
I and Section II) of the WTO (ITA) Agreement and, additionally,
Data Communication equipment.
(c) IT Software shall be entitled for zero customs duty and
zero excise duty.
(20) A revised Notification giving the following new schedule
for the Government of India acceding to the WTO-ITA Ministerial
Declaration of 13 December 1996 at Singapore shall be issued
by the Ministry of Finance:
In Attachment A, Section I and II of WTO-ITA:
(a) Duty shall be brought down to zero by 1 January 1999 on
the following items: Parts & components excluding populated
PCBs in HSN 8473.30, all storage devices in HSN 8471.70, ICs
above Rs. 1000 in HSN 8542, Stepper Motors in HSN 8501.10,
Colour Graphic Display Tube in HSN 8540.40 and Deflective
components for Colour monitor in HSN 8504.
(b) Out of the 217 items listed in ITA-I, 94 items which were
proposed earlier for zero duty by 1st January 2000 shall now
be advanced to 1st January 1999.
(c) The remaining items earlier proposed for zero duty by
the 1st January 2003/2004/2005 shall now be advanced to 1
January 2002.
(d) Concomitantly, the following schedule will be adopted:
* Duty on Capital Goods for the manufacture of items in (c),
wherever applicable, becomes zero by 1 January 2000.
* Inputs/raw materials for the manufacture of the items in
(c), wherever applicable, becomes zero by 1 January 2001
* Dual purpose items will be taken care of, wherever applicable,
by allowing duty drawback benefits or by treating the supplies
to the IT industry as deemed export.
* Zero excise duty is concomitant with zero Customs duty with
in-phase reduction.
Additionally, other suitable supportive measures shall be
taken to encourage Indian hardware industry to become globally
competitive in the light of the revised WTO-ITA schedule.
(21) Customs duty on import of CD-ROMs or Optical Disc Media
or Magnetic Media containing text , data or multimedia as
content shall be charged only on the media and not on the
contents.
(22) Imported IT Products shall be permitted to be taken out
of bonded offices or out of Electronics/IT Units under EOU/EPZ/STP/EHTP
Schemes after a period of 2 years from the date of import
if these are donated to recognised educational institutions,
Government organisations and registered charitable hospitals,
etc., as defined in the Clause 9.19 of the Handbook of Procedures
(Volume I) of the EXIM Policy through a customs notification.
(23) IT Software and IT Services companies, being constituents
of the knowledge industry, shall be exempted from inspection
by Inspectors like those for Factory, Boiler, Excise, Labour,
Pollution/Environment etc.,
(24) With technological advancements in Wide Area Computer-Communication
networks, which have brought about 'Virtual Technology Parks'
in which IT Software and IT services are developed through
online integration of software and services subsystems from
widely separated locations in the country, the concept of
physical bonding has become obsolete. Accordingly, Software
developers/exporters are exempted from Customs bonding at
various export promotion schemes including STP/EOU/EPZ, etc.
The export obligation shall be the same value as given under
the EPCG Scheme. Existing bonded units under the various Software
Export Promotion schemes will also be considered under the
above scheme.
(25) A clarification shall be issued by CBEC that Service
Tax is not applicable on computer software development industry.
(26) The Ministry of Civil Aviation shall issue the following
notifications/ amendments in the regulations :
* Export shipment time for air cargo will be reduced to less
than 24 hours.
* "Known Shipper" will be introduced to avoid delays on account
of cooling off period.
* Cargo companies and other associated agencies to allow consolidation
of export air cargo.
(27) Section 80 HHE of the Income Tax Act provides for income
tax exemption to profits derived from software and services
exports. This section shall be amended as follows:
* The existing formula will be so changed that tax on profits
shall not have any relation to domestic turnover.
* The definition of software and export turnover will be changed
so as to include IT services exports.
* The benefits of this Section for income tax exemption to
profits from exports will be extended to supporting IT Software
& IT Services developers .
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(28) IT software and IT services shall be deemed as manufacturing
activity for the limited purpose of applicability of Section
10 (15) (iv) of the Income Tax Act.
(29) IT Software and IT Services shall be exempted from withholding
tax through amendments in the 'explanation' of Section 9 of
the Income Tax Act.
(30) For individuals buying IT products including computer,
the expenditure shall be deductible under Section 88 of the
Income Tax Act.
(31) No gift tax shall be charged for the giver or Income
Tax for the receiver on PCs upto Rs. 30,000 of the original
purchase price.
(32) For any investment made in IT products and IT software
100 % depreciation shall be allowed in two years for which
Ministry of Finance shall take suitable action.
(33) As the traditional method of asset-based funding of working
capital would not meet the adequate and timely requirements
of fund of the software sector, a differential and flexible
approach shall be adopted by giving special dispensation towards
working capital requirements of this sector in view of the
unique nature of the industry. Accordingly, RBI shall issue,
by 15th August 1998, new guidelines with regard to working
capital requirements for the IT software and services sector
which would be based on simple criteria such as turnover.
Banks shall be advised to give 25 percent of the contract
value for 18 months, with the first six months as term loan
(without collaterals) and from the 7th month onwards annualized
Cash Flow Statements shall be accepted instead of collaterals.
(34) IT software and services industry shall be treated as
a Priority Sector by banks for the next five years. This would
help to meet the requirements of IT software and services
exports, and also the IT industry and applications within
the country. Major banks will be advised to create specialised
IT financing cells in important branches, where IT Software
and Services units are sufficiently large in number. Performance
in this dimension will be monitored by the Ministry of Finance.
(35) Against the present estimate of Rs. 400 crores of working
capital for the industry, the amount shall be increased to
around Rs. 1200 crores by the year 2000 subject to the broad
criteria of pro-rata increase for the prospective requirements
24 months ahead as compared to the actuals of the current
requirements at any given time. As quantitative targeting
is not appropriate, a system will be put in place which would
enable substantial increase in working capital provided by
the banks.
(36) Bank lending to IT Software and Services exporters shall
be made eligible for RBI refinancing with sufficiently low
interest rates.
(37) The banks shall be allowed to invest in the form of equity
in dedicated venture capital funds meant for IT industry as
part of the 5 percent of increment in deposits currently allowed
for shares.
(38) Banks/FIs like ICICI, IDBI, UTI and SBI shall set up
joint ventures with Indian or foreign companies for setting
up of at least four different venture capital dedicated funds
of a corpus of not less than Rs. 50 crores each to cater to
the credit need of the industry. Such venture capitalists
may be allowed to set off losses in one invested company and
profit in another invested company during the block of years
for the purpose of income tax.
(39) The Company's Act shall be amended to facilitate issuance
of Sweat Equity to employees. A new definition No. (66) will
be added after definition No. (65) in Clause 2 as under:
"(66) Sweat Equity means equity allotted to promoters, Directors
or employees for providing any intellectual property or value
addition to the Company".
(40) Ministry of Finance shall include IT software and IT
service sector while issuing general guidelines for dual listing
of companies, as well as while considering two-way fungability
for ADRs/GDRs.
(41)
* Dollar Linked Stock Options to employees of Indian Software
companies were announced in the 1998 Budget and detailed guidelines
on this have been issued by DEA, Ministry of Finance. This
shall be modified in accordance with the definition of IT
Software and IT Services given under (19)(a) and (b) above.
* Employee Stock option schemes for stock listed in India
would also be encouraged. Also, clarification shall be issued
that income tax is applicable only at the time of sale and
not at the time of excise of option.
(42) Recognising the high velocity of business, high degree
of competition and fast technological obsolescence faced by
the IT software and IT service exporters, RBI shall be maximally
accommodate the following:
(a) A blanket approval for overseas investment for acquisition
of software/IT companies across the board for software exporters
with previous three years cumulative actual export realisation
in excess of US $ 25 million to be given up to 50 % or US
$ 25 million, whichever is lower, out of the cumulative actual
export earning of the previous three years. This is subject
to submission of a certificate of software industry by appropriate
authorities.
(b) For FERA approvals beyond this limit, RBI would set up
a mechanism for expeditious processing of applications from
this sector. This shall be announced by 15 August 1998.
(c) For overseas ventures, a dispensation shall be given for
allowing the capitalisation of both goods and services; RBI
shall accordingly notify this in consultation with Commerce
Ministry by 15 August 1998.
(d) As the present allowable limit of 70% of the contract
amount for expenditure abroad does not provide flexibility
for utilisation for the purpose of general corporate objectives
or for business growth purposes, RBI shall permit IT exporters
to freely spend upto 5% of the export proceeds abroad (out
of the total 70%) for miscellaneous/sundry purposes to give
full flexibility. Also, a new list of allowable expenses under
the 70% limit would be worked out by RBI in consultation with
NASSCOM.
(e) RBI shall issue revised EEFC guidelines to eliminate restrictions
on staggered remittance, second and higher generation subsidiaries
and also to allow 20% of the EEFC balances for the use on
the following:
i) Advance remittances for downloading software (upto US $
1 lakh per transaction).
ii) Purchase of equipment and related expenditure
iii) Miscellaneous expenses not detailed in EEFC guidelines
(upto 5% ) of EEFC balances. Such EEFC accounts shall be permitted
for making payments from offshore branches of Indian banks
directly.
(f) Use of International Credit Cards (ICC) abroad for a variety
of purposes required by the IT Software and IT Services sector
shall be permitted, the detailing of which will be carried
out by RBI and notified by 15 August 1998, in particular:
i) All payments currently made under Exchange Earnings Foreign
Currency (EEFC) Account shall also be allowed to made through
International Credit Cards (ICC). Advance payment for IT software
and IT services shall be permitted to be done through ICC
for which RBI will issue a notification. Notification shall
be issued that ICC may also be used for paying for IT Software
and IT services purchased over INTERNET or EXTRANET and also
for registering domain names.
ii) RBI shall issue a modified and simplified SOFTEX form
required for IT Software and IT Services export by 15 August
1998.
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(43) In the EPCG scheme a system of self-declaration shall
be introduced with 100% post-checking subject to punitive
penalty for default.
(44) The value limit for import of IT Products including personal
computers shall be reduced from Rs. 1.50 lakhs (c.i.f) to
Rs. 70,000 (c.i.f).
(45) Private and public organisations providing IT infrastructure
shall be included for duty exemption for importing capital
goods. Such service providers, in view of such capital goods
imported, shall undertake the export obligations as provided
for import of capital goods in the EPCG Scheme.
(46) The India Brand Equity Fund Scheme operated by the Ministry
of Commerce shall be made available for Software companies
with lower interest and longer interval.
(47) On-site IT Services should be made easier by combating
Visa regulations of the recipient countries through a planned
diplomatic strategy by the Ministry of External Affairs and
the Indian Missions abroad for which MEA will create a suitable
dedicated structure. This will also include signing of totalisation
agreements, wherever necessary so as to maintain the competitive
advantage of Indian companies.
(48) Returns from package software development shall be increased
by enabling Indian Marketing companies to set up wholesale
companies abroad. They shall also be given maximum flexibility
in organising the marketing of package software from India
through INTERNET.
(49) For benchmarking our country with our emerging competitors,
a study shall be conducted at Government cost once in two
years by internationally reputed consultancy companies.
(50) Restrictions on the location of IT software and IT Services
(including IT training) companies in residential areas shall
be removed.
(51) To enable organisations and companies to identify, explore
and plan strategies for Large Niche Markets like Y2K and Euro,
nationally and corporate wise, all applicable provisions shall
be made applicable on higher priority basis. Through MOC and
DOE funds 'India Pavilions' shall be set up in several major
IT exhibitions around the world through the initiative and
coordination of ESC and NASSCOM.
(52) Recognising the catastrophic effect of the Y2K problem
for solving which a few hundred billion dollars are being
spent around the world, an immediate investment of Rs. 700
crore as corpus funds shall be mobilised to control the crisis
in critical Government, Public and Private organisations and
services; efforts to sensitise such organisations in the country
facing the crisis shall be taken up by the Government immediately
including issuance of Government orders for strict compliance
in a time bound manner; a High level empowered Task Force
with representatives from the Government, Industry Associations,
Banks and Financial Institutions, Defence Services, Utility
and other Public Service organisations, Railways, among others,
shall be constituted by the Government of India.
(53) * 'Mega Web sites' shall be created on INTERNET for promoting
marketing and encouraging Indian Software products and packages
under multiple initiatives.
* Creation and hosting of websites on servers located in India
will be encouraged.
(54) Under DEPB Rupee trade arrangement, IT Software, IT Services
and IT product export to Russia shall be permitted with promotional
support given by the Electronics and Software Export Promotion
Council (ESC), STP, etc.
(55) All promotional and liberalisation policy instruments
available to IT Software and IT Services shall be made available
to IT enabled services including the Information Content Industry
by classifying IT enabled Services as tantamount to IT Software
and IT Services.
(56) For promoting Indian Software Packages (system as well
as application software) users shall be given fiscal incentives
for buying Indian packages. A special screening mechanism
will be worked out for identifying the more promising packages
developed in India and giving consistent support by the Government
as well as the industry for ensuring acceptance in international
markets.
(57) Private STPs shall be encouraged to be set up by combining
the provisions under (4), (7), (8), (12) , (13), (24), (43),
(45), (54) and (55), among others.
IT for all by 2008
For enabling a proactive drive for 'IT for all by 2008', the
following new policy instruments shall be devised and activated.
'OPERATION KNOWLEDGE'
Recognising Information Technology to be a frontier area of
knowledge, and also a critical enabling tool for assimilating,
processing and productivising all other spheres of knowledge,
the Government shall launch 'OPERATION KNOWLEDGE'. The aim
of this national campaign will be to universalise computer
literacy and also to spread the use of computers and IT in
education. 'OPERATION KNOWLEDGE' shall be developed into a
comprehensive policy within the next three months. However,
the following initiatives shall be taken for the immediate
implementation of some of its key objectives:
(58) The Government shall soon launch three schemes -- Vidyarthi
Computer Scheme, Shikshak Computer Scheme and School Computer
Scheme -- to enable every student, teacher or school respectively
desirous of buying computers to do so under attractive financial
packages. These schemes will be supported by a suite of initiatives
such as lowering the cost of PCs, easy-instalment bank loans,
computer donations by IT companies and other business houses,
bulk donations of computers by NRI organisations, large-volume
bargain price imports, multi-lateral funding, etc.
(59) Computers and Internet shall be made available in every
school, polytechnic, college, university and public hospital
in the country by the year 2003.
(60) All universities, engineering colleges, medical colleges
and other institutions of higher learning in the country as
well as Research and Development Organisations shall be networked
for a supplementary programme of distance education for improving
the quality of education before year 2000.
(61) The seven national level institutions (IITs, IISc.) shall
be encouraged to triple their output of students in IT by
suitably restructuring the programme.
(62) A National Council of IT Education comprising experts
from both the industry and the academicia, shall be set up
for defining courses and their content in the light of rapid
developments taking place in Information Technology. The Council
will also initiate a 'Teach the Teachers' (3T) programme for
upgrading on a regular basis the IT knowledge and skills of
teachers.
(63) An IT Course Module shall be made a compulsory component
of all Degree Courses within a short period.
(64) The setting up of Indian Institutes of Information Technology
(IIIT) shall be implemented with urgency to make up for the
lost time. Hi-tech institutions like the Indian Institute
of Information Technology (IIIT) will be given the Deemed
University status without insisting upon the mandatory three-year
stipulation.
(65) The Government shall promote the pairing of our Universities
with centres of excellence in IT in developed countries.
(66) Specific courses shall be launched in association with
the Software Industry and IIMs to provide Project Management
skills and develop specialised courses on Software Marketing.
(67) The concept of SMART Schools where the emphasis is not
only on Information Technology in Schools, but also on the
use of skills and values that will be important in the next
millennium, shall be started on a pilot demonstrative basis
in each State.
(68) An Institute for Computer Professionals of India shall
be set up on the pattern of the Institute of Chartered Accountants
of India; the Institute will be nucleated by NASSCOM with
initial financial support from the industry and the Government.
The Institute will be given the responsibility as an Accreditation
Body for IT Education and Training Programmes with full Government
recognition in addition to the DOEACC Programme of the Department
of Electronics.
(69) To enhance the knowledge base of IT related education
at all levels the Government shall establish Information Technology,
System Engineering and IT Security Institutes from within
existing manpowr of the Armed Forces. The Centres of Excellence
in IT Software and System Engineering in the Defence Services
will be utilised to the national advantage.
(70) Virtual Institutes in different parts of the country
shall be set up to achieve excellence in distance education.
(71) The talent and expertise of IT-trained ex-servicemen
shall be utilised for IT penetration in rural India and Government
will fully support this offer of the Armed Forces. A Plan
will be prepared and implemented for utilising the services
of the large number of IT literate defence personnel retiring
every year for propagating the IT culture at sub-district
levels.
(72) A 'National Qualification Framework' shall be established
for computerised online objective system of knowledge acquisition;
An 'Educational Credit Bank' shall be implemented for giving
flexibility to integrate credits earned in different institutions/systems
towards the eligibility for diplomas and degrees.
(73) A specialised sub-committee of this Task Force shall
coordinate the setting up of National and State level Digital
Libraries Projects.
(74) A pilot project under the aegis of the National Task
Force on Information Technology shall be launched in some
lead districts which have already attained universal literacy,
with the aim of achieving universal computer literacy in all
the secondary schools in these districts. Alongside, the network
of educational institutions in these districts will be assisted
to maximise the induction of IT in order to create world-class
talent at the top-end of the education pyramid. These pilot
projects will be joint initiatives of the local educational
institutions, respective State Governments and the Centre.
In the first instance, such a pilot project will be launched
in Dakshin Kannada and Udupi Districts in Karnataka on a substantive
self-financing basis. Within a short time, the same will be
extended to suitable districts in other States.
(75) In view of the lower-than-national-average levels of
technical and IT education facilities in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar,
Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, several educational centres
will be identified with a view to making them models for IT-based
education and training at all levels. The aim of this initiative
will be to promote IT education and awareness in Hindi-speaking
States and thereby revitalise the Hindi heartland in all the
fields of knowledge and knowledge-based enterprises. Allahabad
shall be developed as the first such model IT-based education-cum-business
centre. Within a short time, this initiative will be extended
to other States which are underdeveloped in IT.
IT Penetration & IT Awareness
(76) Government shall encourage the setting up of value-added
network services including ATMs, Electronic Kiosks, Telephones,
Smart Cards, etc., for providing a 'One-Stop Non-Stop' service
to the public.
(77) To make IT a mass movement, an awareness creation strategy
shall be worked out within two months and the structures for
implementing the same shall be put in place.
(78) A major promotional campaign shall soon be launched to
boost IT in Indian languages. This campaign will be based
on a multi-pronged approach, involving fiscal and other incentives
for R&D, production, marketing and popularisation of IT
products in Indian languages. This recommendation addresses
the reality that India can become a major IT power only if
IT penetration in the country deepens and widens-which in
turn, is dependent on large-scale use of IT in Indian languages.
(79) The Government shall take all the necessary steps to
boost IT for agricultural and integrated rural development.
Towards this end, a number of demonstration projects will
be devised in each State taking into account the specific
strengths and needs at the local level. A unique 'WIRED VILLAGES'
pilot project has been launched under the aegis of the National
Information Technology Task Force on Information Technology
at the Warananagar Cooperative Complex in Kolhapur District
in Maharashtra. Efforts will be made to quickly replicate
such projects in other states.
(80) The Government shall take necessary measures to develop,
productivise and use, in domestic and global markets, indigenous
technologies in wireless telecommunication such as CorDECT,
remote access switch, etc., to achieve the national objective
of rapid, low-cost expansion of telephone and Internet connectivity
in rural and remote areas. Similarly, promotional measures
shall be taken to encourage technologies that bring IT and
Internet to the masses through the vast network of Cable TV
houses.
(81) For promoting electronic commerce in a time-bound manner,
a strict directive shall be given to Sea Ports, Airports Authority
of India, DGFT, Banks, Container Services, Customs and Indian
Railways in accordance with the programme approved in the
tenth Export Promotion Board meeting.
(82) Bar Coding of every item sold in the country shall be
made compulsory within a five-year period.
(83) The Armed Forces shall integrate far-flung and remote
areas (Ladakh, North-East, Andaman & Nicobar Islands,
Kutch, Lakshadweep and Minicoy Islands, border areas of Himachal
and Rajasthan) with mainstream India, through IT penetration
as part of their Civic Action Programme. The funds for this
initiative shall be provided through the Government/Venture/Seed
Capital.
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Citizen IT Interface
(84) The Cabinet has approved NIC's proposal to make government
Information, other than that having a bearing on security,
available to the public. This decision shall be implemented
by suitably empowering NIC to do so. This recommendation addresses
the felt need for easy availability and extensive transparency
of government information.
(85) District Information System (DISNIC) Plan Programme shall
be made widespread and databases updated online, shall be
made available to the public and Panchayats, among others.
Courts Information System(COURTIS), Parliament Information
System (PARLIS), Computerised Rural Information System Programme
(CRISP) and other such databases shall be updated online over
NICNET and access to public facilitated .
(86) A Citizens Charter for effective and responsive administration
in terms of time-bound service to the public shall be framed
and implemented under the coordination of the Department of
Administrative Reforms & Public Grievances and hoisted
on the official INTERNET Web Site 'India Image' of the Government
of India.
IT in Government
(87) Each Department/Agency in the Central Government and
State Governments shall be required to prepare a Five Year
IT Plan.
(88) 1-3% of the budget of every Ministry/Department shall
be earmarked for applying IT in the Department/sector; this
investment will include not only the purchase of IT products,
IT Software, but also for training and IT services; Reappropriation
of the Department's budget for the IT sub-budget head shall
be within the delegated powers of the Head of the Department.
(89) NIC, at the national level, and technology service organisations
at the State level, shall establish 'Framework Contracts'
with reputed suppliers to provide a wide range of IT consultancy,
specialist services and IT products to Government agencies
to reach the benefit of lower costs through bulk purchases.
(90) India shall participate in international projects like
'Government Online' Project of G-8 countries so as to not
only learn from the experience of others but also to contribute
to the global experience in planning and implementing projects
to promote IT in Government.
(91) Tele-commuting is recognised as a new modality of doing
work in an office and labour laws accommodating the same shall
be enacted. An option shall be given to employees, where feasible
and efficient, to accomplish part of their work through telecommuting
in the framework of 'Management by Objectives' (MBO).
(92) The Government of India shall set up a central repository
of data elements in Government with the NIC and make it accessible
through NICNET.
(93) The recommendations of the TG-MAP Committee for Map and
GIS Data Policy approved by the Committee of Secretaries under
the Cabinet Secretary, shall be notified by the Ministry of
Defence expeditiously.
(94) A computerised National Inventory of Training pertaining
to different areas shall be maintained.
(95) A computerised Inventory of Government best practices
for electronic access shall be maintained.
(96) Government shall stipulate IT literacy as an essential
requirement for all future Government and public sector employment;
in the Annual Confidential Reports of government employees,
a column shall be introduced regarding contribution to IT
utilisation in the department/organisation.
(97) A National Institute of Smart Government shall be set
up to focus on all issues concerning IT-supported governance.
(98) State Institutes of Public Administrations shall be re-engineered
to help bring about IT-responsive State Governments.
(99) Suitable floor space in Government buildings, which are
not utilised during non-office hours, could be given to private
educational institutions for IT training purposes in return
for a proportionate number of free nominations of Government
employees for IT training.
Data Security Systems and Cyber Laws
(100) A National Computerised Records Security Document shall
be prepared within three months for enforcing security requirements
by consulting similar documents prepared by SAG, JCB, WESEE,
etc.
(101) An Information Security Agency shall be set up at the
National level to play the role of Cyber Cop.
(102) A National Policy on Information Security, Privacy and
Data Protection Act for handling of computerised data shall
be framed by the Government within six months.
(103) Cyber infractions shall be addressed within the legal
framework by the Ministry of Law, Justice and Company Affairs.
(104) The cryptology and Cyber Security knowledge and experience
developed by the Defence establishments shall be suitably
transferred to the civilian information security agencies
for wider dissemination in the country to increase information
security, network security and bring about a greater degree
of secure use of EFT, Digital Signature, etc.
(105) The procedure of keeping records in paper form in public
and private STPs shall be restricted to a maximum duration
of two months after which the records shall be kept only in
the Electronic/Magnetic/Optical media.
(106) The Indian Telegraph Act of 1885, the Indian Post Office
Act of 1888 and the Indian Wireless Telegraphy Act of 1993
shall be suitably modified in the light of the growing predominance
of IT in day-to-day life. Suitable changes will also be made
in other Laws/Acts, wherever necessary.
(107) The draft set of Cyber Laws prepared by the Cyber Law
Committee set up by the Committee of Secretaries, shall be
approved by the Government with suitable modifications and
implemented, as a first step, within six months.
(108) All necessary instructions, notifications and amendments
to procedures/Law shall be issued by the respective Ministries
/ Departments within three months.
ANNEXURE
Notification : Appointment of Taskforce
F.No. 360/31/C/10/98-ES.II
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
(Bharat Sarkar)
Prime Minister's Office
(Pradhan Mantri Karyalaya)
New Delhi, dated 22-5-1998
Subject : Appointment of a National Task Force on Information
Technology and Software Development
Government has decided to constitute a National Task Force
on Information Technology and Software Development to formulate
the draft of a National Informatics Policy with the following
composition
Chairperson Shri Jaswant Singh
Deputy Chairperson, Planning Commission
Co-Chairpersons Shri N. Chandrababu Naidu
Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh
Dr. M.G.K. Menon
Former Union Minister of State,
Science & Technology
Members
Dr. N. Seshagiri
Member-Convener Director General,
National Informatics Centre
Shri N. Vittal Chairman, Public Enterprises Selection Board,
Former Secretary, Department of Electronics and Chairman,
Telecom Commission
Shri A.V. Gokak Chairman, Telecom Commission
Shri R. Gupta Secretary, Department of Electronics
Shri P.G. Mankad Secretary, Ministry of I&B
Shri T.H. Chowdary Former CMD of VSNL and Informtion Technology
Adviser to the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh
Dr. P.V. Indiresan Former Director, IIT, Chennai
Shri Dewang Mehta Executive Director, National Association
of Software Companies (NASSCOM)
Shri N.R. Narayana Murthy Chairman & Managing Director,
Infosys
Shri Ashok Soota Group President, WIPRO Infotech Group
Shri Rajendra Pawar Vice Chairman and MD, NIIT
Dr. Y.S. Rajan Senior Adviser (Technology), CII
Shri Ravi Parthasarathy Managing Director, Infrastructure
Leasing & Finance Services (ILFS)
Shri Anil Bakht IT professional
Shri Sudheendra Kulkarni Director (Communications and Research),
PMO
The tasks and terms of reference of the Task Force are given
in the Annexure.
The Task Force will be guided by an "IT Vision Group" consisting
of eminent IT professionals, academics, civil servants (serving
or retired), businessmen, political leaders and prominent
IT Professionals from abroad - both NRIs and foreigners.
The Task Force may with the permission of the Chairperson,
co-opt or invite as many persons, including officials of relevant
Government departments, as it may deem appropriate in the
course of its deliberations.
The Task Force will be covered within the definition/explanation
of High Level Commissions/Committees as given in Cabinet Secretariat
O.M. No. 105/1/1/75-CF dated 20.11.75.
Secretarial assistance to the Task Force will be provided
by the National Informatics Centre (NIC), Planning Commission.
The TA/DA of official members shall be borne by their parent
Departments. The TA/DA of non-official members (as admissible
to Grade I officers of the highest category in Government
of India) shall be paid by the National Informatics Centre,
Planning Commission.
The Task Force will complete its work and submit its final
report to the Prime Minister within 90 days.
(T.K.A. Nair)
Secretary to the Prime Minister
TASKS
The various tasks of the National Task Force on Information
Technology and Software Development are as follows :
This Task Force will formulate the draft National Policy on
Informatics whose aim will be to enable India to emerge as
an Information Technology superpower within the next ten years.
It will submit the draft policy to the Prime Minister in three
months.
The Task Force will recommend an appropriate empowered institutional
mechanism to implement this policy as a national mission with
the participation of the Central and State Governments, industry,
academic institutions, and the society at large.
This Task Force will recommend, within one month, immediate
steps that the Government needs to take to remove bottlenecks
and give a big boost to India's Information Technology industry.
This Task Force will prepare a Vision Statement that will
excite and energize the people of India, creating the faith
in them that Information Technology vitally aids personal
growth and national growth. It will also suggest a strategy
for the effective articulation and dissemination of that Vision,
so as to create an ethos, an ambience, a mindset, and a work
culture consistent with the needs of the emerging knowledge-driven
global civilisation.
This Task Force will prepare a blue print for making the adoption
of Information Technology into a national movement, with a
wide network of empowered task forces at all governmental
and non-governmental levels.
TERMS OF REFERENCE
The terms of reference of the National Task Force on Information
Technology and Software Development are as follows :
1) Recommend a strategy for the extensive use of Information
Technology in all areas of national economy - agriculture,
industry, trade and services - as a critical input in making
India a global economic power.
2) Prepare the design for building a world-class physical,
institutional and regulatory IT infrastructure, which is appropriate
for India. This design will embrace the growing convergence
of telecommunications, computers, consumer electronics and
the media infrastructure (minus its content).
3) Towards this end, determine the means for creating a National
Informatics Infrastructure (NII) backbone, bridging it to
the Local Informatics Infrastructure (LII) and the Global
Informatics Infrastructure (GII). The design of the NII will
be dynamic, taking into account the rapidly changing nature
of Information Technology.
4) Recommend how NII can be created at an optimal cost by
using the existing resources of the various wings of Government
such as the Department of Telecommunications, Prasar Bharati,
Railways, Power Grid Corporation of India, etc.
5) Suggest measures for achieving a massive expansion in the
use of the Internet by all sections of society, especially
in business and education, and development of Indian content
on the Internet.
6) Recommend a strategy for boosting the learning and use
of Information Technology in Indian languages. the policy
will suggest measures to promote the development of software,
especially educational and commercial software, in Indian
languages.
7) Develop a strategy for a twenty-fold increase in India's
software and other IT service exports in the next ten years.
In particular, the Policy will focus on the development of
world-class software products and brands that can quickly
establish global dominance.
8) Suggest measures to catalyze the growth of exports through
the extensive use of -Commerce and EDI(Electronic Data Interchange).
9) Suggest ways in which the use of IT can be maximised in
the Government at all levels, so as to make its functioning
people-friendly, transparent and accountable.
10) Develop a strategy for dramatically increasing the PC
density in the country and, to that end, ensure that every
household and commercial establishments that has a telephone
also has a computer. The strategy will aim to facilitate the
availability of computer hardware, software and connectivity
at the lowest possible cost.
11) Device a strategy for establishing a strong and internationally
competitive domestic manufacturing base for computers, computer
components and peripherals.
12) Design a training and manpower development plan involving
Government agencies, private business, voluntary organizations,
educational institutions and others to quadruple the number
of IT professionals in the country in the next two years.
The Task Force will suggest a plan to implement the commitment
made in the National Agenda for Governance to ensure universal
computer literacy in all secondary schools in the country.
The plan will also aim at making available IT education to
all those sections of the economy where it serves as a productivity
multiplier.
13) Develop a strategic plan to raise the necessary financial
resources to realise the objectives of the National Informatics
Policy. This plan will rely on innovative means of funding
that minimise government outlay.
14) Suggest an appropriate legal frame work for the creation
of an IT-based society, with due focus on intellectual property
rights (IPR), secrecy, security and safety of information.
15) Recommend how India can leverage its global competitiveness
in InfoTech to play a prominent role in the development of
IT in other countries, especially those that are underdeveloped.
List of Co-Opted Members
Dr. M. S. Ahluwalia
Secretary (Finance), Ministry of Finance
Shri P. P. Prabhu
Secretary (Commerce), Ministry of Commerce
Shri N. K. Singh
Secretary (Revenue), Ministry of Finance
Lt. Gen. S. S. Mehta
Dy Chief of Army Staff
Commodore Prem Chand
Additional Director General, WESEE, Navy
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