
Industrialist Gautam Adani on Wednesday hailed India’s public digital infrastructure as unmatched anywhere in the world, claiming that no other country has built such inclusive and scalable technology at such speed.
Speaking to faculty and students at the Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Lucknow, Adani described platforms like Aadhaar, UPI, and ONDC as ‘launchpads’ for the new India.
Gautam Adani asserts India’s Digital Stack
Adani asserted that India’s digital public infrastructure was not just a technological achievement but a core driver of inclusive growth and innovation.
“These are not just platforms,” he said. “They are the launchpads of a new India — inclusive by design and exponential by default.”
He emphasised that India’s digital stack would be central to transforming the country into a $25 trillion economy by 2050. He listed four key structural advantages driving India’s rise:
- A youthful and ambitious population
- Rapidly growing domestic demand
- A powerful digital infrastructure
- A surge in domestic capital backing Indian entrepreneurs
India’s Model: A Global Example of Public Innovation
Adani highlighted that India’s digital platforms — Aadhaar (identity), UPI (payments), and ONDC (open e-commerce) — have become the backbone of public innovation.
He described the infrastructure as an operating system for economic growth, rooted in trust, scale, and inclusion.
International organisations, including the World Bank, have praised India’s digital public goods, calling them a ‘unique success story’ that boosts state capacity, reduces costs, and enables innovation without monopolistic control.
Countries in Africa and Latin America are now exploring ways to adopt India’s model.
Addressing students directly, Gautam Adani urged them to seize the moment.
“This is your moment — the canvas is India, and the colours are yours to invent,” he said.
Additionally, he encouraged them to embrace risk and create new solutions rather than follow old frameworks.
He contrasted traditional approaches with the need for bold, forward-thinking leadership.
“The future will not belong to those who play it safe,” he said. “It will belong to those who maximise possibility.”
Personal Reflections and Visionary Insights
Adani shared his personal journey — from trading diamonds in Mumbai at age 16 to building complex infrastructure projects across India and beyond.
He reflected on the challenges faced in places like Mundra, Khavda, Australia, and Dharavi, explaining that conviction and vision drove his success, not predictability.
“Maps will only take you where someone has already been,” he said. “To build something truly new, you need a compass that points to possibility.”
Concluding his address, Adani stated that India’s moment was not just economic, but moral.
“In a world fractured by war and hunger for dominance, India stands tall — by its restraint,” he said. “Where others impose, India uplifts. Where others take, India gives — quietly, consistently, and with dignity.”
Rather than ending with policy advice, Adani issued a call to conscience. He urged students to lead with character, pursue hard problems, and act as custodians of civilisation.
“India does not need more painters who fill in the blanks,” he concluded. “It needs those who can paint with colours not yet imagined.”
Adani’s remarks served as a reminder that India’s digital and economic future lies in the hands of its youth — and that the tools, ambition, and infrastructure are all in place to shape a new world.
Also Read: India Set To Become $25 Trillion Powerhouse By 2050, Says Gautam Adani At IIM Lucknow
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