Aadhaar and the Buddha's Middle Path

A panel discussion with Arun Maira, former Planning Commission member, Jairam Ramesh, former union minister and Sanjay Jain, former technology executive at UIDAI

Founding Fuel

Titles of books, essays, newspaper stories and panel discussions play many different roles. Often, they capture the crux. The title of Malcolm Gladwell’s bestselling book The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference pretty much says what the book is about. News headlines almost always summarise the news. But sometimes, a title is an invitation, a first stepping stone, to explore the subject further. ‘Aadhaar - Dystopia or Utopia?’ the title of a panel discussion held on Sunday, October 29, 2017 as part of the Bangalore Literature Festival clearly belonged to the second category. 

The panel included Arun Maira, former Planning Commission member, Jairam Ramesh, former union minister and Sanjay Jain, former technology executive at Unique Identification Authority of India, abbreviated as UIDAI. The discussion was moderated by Founding Fuel’s Charles Assisi.  

While the topic might have reflected the polarisation one might see on Twitter or Facebook—and among those who get disproportionately influenced by debates on social media—the conversation was nuanced and provided insights into why politicians, policy makers and bureaucrats take specific positions or a particular course of action. For example, UIDAI found out that making it easy for people without fingerprints (which can happen because of manual labour, old age and other reasons) also led to some people misusing it. There is a trade-off between convenience and security. And security is often a cat and mouse game. Systems evolve, and they never reach a state of perfection.

As Jain said, “Technology per se, particularly digital technology, is very flexible, and it does have the capability to say if this is the situation, then follow some other path and get to the end you want to.” 

Different societies, and countries, approach the problem differently. For instance, Ramesh, during his tenure as a minister in the UPA government, was in the middle of a storm when the debate raged all around about genetically modified food. The government could then have taken the permissive approach of the United States, or it could have taken the prohibitive approach preferred by Europe. Ramesh said it decided to follow the approach of the Buddha and took the middle path, a precautionary approach. That has relevance for Aadhaar, he said.

And the approach to that middle path is to listen to the different voices, said Maira. So decision makers can understand the fears and concerns that can be very real for those who are feeling those concerns. “Our discussions break down into real harangues about are you for it or against it. You cannot say ‘I am exploring it’… there is no room to explore issues that are pretty complex,” he said.

Do listen to full discussion.

Also Read

Aadhaar and the Arnab MonologuesPointers to contemporary politics, different kinds of critics, media narratives and why writing is a bad idea from a literature festival

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Founding Fuel

Founding Fuel aims to create the new playbook of entrepreneurship. Think of us as a hub for entrepreneurs- the go-to place for ideas, insights, practices and wisdom essential to build the enterprise of tomorrow. It is co-founded by veteran journalists Indrajit Gupta and Charles Assisi, along with CS Swaminathan, the former president of Pearson's online learning venture.

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