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It’s
a sad fact that though everyone talks about taking IT to the
masses, not enough has been done on this front. However, there
are some projects which could serve as beacons for others.
Pankaj Mishra chronicles a project that has benefited the
lives of rural women below the poverty line
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| The
kiosks are multilingual and smart card reading is also
possible at a few locations, says Daniel Ingitaraj |
There
has been a lot of talk about how Indias success in the
field of IT has not percolated down to people below the poverty
line, and that the Digital Divide is all that
rural India has got so far. Recently, some state governments,
including those of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh (AP) and Karnataka,
have started working towards helping the rural population
through IT. A small district in AP called West Godavari has
realised the potential of IT to usher in a social revolution.
This has been made possible by Web services. While IT pundits
are busy discussing how Web services can change the way we
interact and do business, and argue over the competitive strengths
and weaknesses of SunONE and .NET, villagers in West Godavari
are reaping the benefits of this technology.
The
goal
The collectorate of West Godavari wanted to help women below
the poverty line, to encourage savings and help them get easy
access to government agencies. It turned to CoOptions, a company
that had been working with womens self help groups (a
self help group or SHG is a group of rural poor who have volunteered
to organise themselves into a group for eradication of poverty
among the members within a time frame of three years) to develop
a banking management solution that would facilitate and encourage
savings and maintain records, help women interact with banks,
co-ordinate with government agencies for grants and schemes,
as well as facilitate fund transfers and fund management.
It would also help them learn about economic activities, and
provide access to information on health, childcare and sanitation.
Mahila Spurthi 1.0
CoOptions developed Mahila Spurthi 1.0 for the
womens SHGs in rural areas to facilitate bank transactions
and lending records, communication with different agencies
like government offices (public health centres, police stations,
etc), dissemination of information to users via IDACs (Information
Dissemination and Acquisition Centres) and performance reviews
of all the groups that transact business at IDACs. CoOptions
was in a position to get an early look at the .NET platform
and was one of the early adopters of .NET Alerts in India.
.NET Alerts provides a messaging system which can advise depositors
at, say, a bank, confirming their transactions. In February,
kiosks with instructions in Telugu were installed at 15 villages
to see how the system worked. Now there are over 100 kiosks
and the authorities are planning to install another 600 or
so, says Daniel Ingitaraj, senior marketing manager
at Microsoft India. The beauty of this implementation
lies in the fit provided by Web services for this
unique problem. After analysing the situation and evaluating
various options, Web services came into the picture.
Mahila Spurthi provides links to the mandal revenue officer,
commercial banks, police stations and public health centres.
CoOptions plans to extend this package to offer information
and services pertaining to womens and childrens
health and development.
The basic feature of Mahila Spurthi is that it works at the
village level over dial-up connections.
Mahila
Spurthi 1.0 provides:
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Remote transaction updating.
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Support for existing third party components using COM Interoper-ability.
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A single data set to replace multiple record sets.
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Reduction of database to a proportionate size.
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Ease of integration of current and future services.
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Interoperability on data.
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Reduces expenses (brings down travel cost to nearly one-fifteenth
of original costs.)
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Automatic maintenance of 100 percent accounting.
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Reach to global and domestic markets.
XML-based Web services offer much of the functionality
that we currently need as we do not have to develop from scratch.
Microsofts .NET technology helps not only seamless integration
with the Internet, but also smooth migration of existing applications
developed in Visual Studio to Visual Studio .NET, says
K Anil Kumar, technical head, CoOptions India.
This solution is scalable to the district level; it gives
the district collector access to data pertaining to the entire
district. The collector can view data with a drill-down approach
to a specific mandal, an IDAC in that specific mandal, an
SHG, and even the savings and borrowings of an individual
member of that particular SHG. While all government services
and schemes need the data, Mahila Spurthi frees the collector
from maintaining the repository at every location and at all
levels of the hierarchy.
These Web services let the end-user know and understand the
acknowledgement process for all activities done by him by
means of Alerts that are easily understandable even by a layperson
(though Web services is a high-end technology). Web services
let developers plug into a localised service as a desktop
application, to client/server architecture, and to an Internet-enabled
application. All these kiosks are multilingual, and
smart card reading is also possible at a few locations,
says Ingitaraj.
Social revolution
In West Godavari district we have 22,000 womens
SHGs; they have formed themselves into small thrift groups
and are saving every month. While we were at this stage we
looked at ways and means of further empowering them. We wanted
to use the latest technology to better the lives of these
rural women. It was at this time that we had a series of discussions
with CoOptions, and we have now come up with a model where
the womens groups are able to handle some issues on
their own, says Poonam Malkondiah, collector of the
district.
Today, if a woman in a rural village wants a caste certificate
or the particulars of her land she is able to do it online.
Accountability of grassroots institutions has definitely increased
with this technology. I am happy that CoOptions has come up
with this .NET solution that I believe is going to reduce
the cost of project execution...it will be very useful to
expand these projects in rural areas. I hope that we will
be able to link up with this technology very soon in West
Godavari, not only in this mandal but in all 45 mandals,
she adds.
Benefits
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Ease of integration of current and future services
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Interoperability of data
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Increase in benefits in terms of integration without implication
on cost
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Seamless integration with the Internet
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Scalability
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Replicable across departments
Software and services implemented by Microsoft
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.NET Alerts (web services)
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Windows Messenger
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Windows 2000 Server
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SQL Server 2000
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Visual Studio.NET
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Microsoft Consultancy Services
| Mahila
Spurthi 1.0 applications |
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Smart Card ApplicationThis application helps
in storing SHG details on a smart card secured and
authenticated mode of transaction.
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Communication softwareWomen can send and receive
information through text, audio and video. The text
mail component transmits text-based e-mail messages
such as letters, while the audio mail component helps
in recording audio messages and transmitting them.
The video mail component lets rural folk record video
messages for transmission.
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Bank ApplicationThis application automates bank
activities like the maintenance of savings bank and
loaning information of SHGs.
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MPDO ApplicationThis application aggregates
information related to all SHGs and IDACs of the mandal,
and provides a mechanism to view the statistical information
for effective decision making.
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IDAC Application for SHG ProfileCreating new
SHG profiles; bank transaction, internal member lending,
income & expenses reports.
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| Empowerment
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Mahila Spurthi 1.0 offers clustered banking, which
reduces cash risk.
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The implementation has led to immediate and increased
responsiveness and accountability.
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The account books of the SHG have been fully automated.
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The solution provides integration with external market
agencies such as suppliers and buyers.
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Single point for information availability and communication
with MPDO, public health centre and police station.
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Information on all aspects of life including health,
childcare, sanitation and community living.
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| About
.Net |
| .NET
is Microsofts platform for XML Web services, the
next generation of software that connects the world of
information, devices and people in a unified way. The
.NET platform enables the creation and use of XML-based
applications, processes, and websites as services which
share and combine information and functionality with each
other by design, on any platform or smart device, to provide
tailored solutions for organisations and individuals.
Visual Studio .NET offers a comprehensive set of tools
for creating XML Web services. It also includes the .NET
frameworka development environment built on industry
standards that supports multiple programming languages. |
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