India’s digital public infrastructure initiatives from mobility and payments to taxation, credit and e-commerce, is not executed by ministries or startups. It is by nonprofits.
Behind systems like the National Payments Corporation of India, Goods and Services Tax Network, Open Network for Digital Commerce and Digi Yatra Foundation, I observe an institutional choice: the use of Section 8 companies as the vehicles for executing and governing digital public infrastructure. Section 8 companies are simply nonprofit entities under Indian law—organisations set up for public purpose, without a profit motive.
What makes this model distinctive is not just the technology it enables, but the way it combines three layers that sit together so seamlessly: technology, nonprofit structure, and the authority of the state.
At the base is the technology layer—APIs, platforms, protocols and interoperable systems that allow millions of transactions, filings and interactions to take place in real time. On top of this sits the institutional layer: Section 8 companies that are designed to be neutral, mission-driven, and capable of bringing together government and industry stakeholders. Anchoring both is the state—through policy direction, regulatory oversight and legitimacy.
Put simply, the system is built in code, governed through nonprofits, and anchored by the state.
This architecture gives these organisations a form of power that is easy to miss. They do not just implement policy, they shape how policy is experienced in practice. The National Payments Corporation of India determines how payments move across the country, who can plug into the system, and under what conditions.
The Goods and Services Tax Network translates tax law into a digital workflow that businesses must navigate. The Open Network for Digital Commerce is attempting to redesign how buyers and sellers discover each other in digital markets.
For the Indian state, this model solves several practical challenges at once.
First, it addresses the limits of traditional state capacity. Building and maintaining large-scale digital systems requires specialised talent, continuous iteration, and product thinking—areas where government departments often struggle. Section 8 entities can hire laterally, operate with greater flexibility, and move at the speed that technology demands.
Second, it creates a way to involve industry without ceding control. Payments require banks, commerce requires platforms, and data-sharing frameworks require financial institutions. By placing these actors within a nonprofit structure, the state enables collaboration without handing over the system to any single private player.
Third, it builds trust and neutrality. Digital infrastructure, especially in areas like finance, identity or commerce—depends on broad participation. A nonprofit form signals public purpose and neutrality in a way that a private platform often cannot.
Finally, it allows the state to retain strategic oversight without direct operation. Regulators and ministries continue to set the direction and guardrails, while execution is handled by institutions designed specifically for scale.
The result is a middle path: not a bureaucratic system that struggles to keep up with technological change, and not a market dominated by a few large platforms, but a hybrid model that draws from both.
Seen this way, India’s digital public infrastructure is as much an institutional innovation as it is a technological one. As countries around the world look to replicate elements of India Stack, what may travel is not just the code, but the underlying model—of how to organise, govern and scale it.
Yet, like all institutional experiments, this one raises questions that are only beginning to surface. These entities sit in an unusual position—exercising significant influence over markets and citizen experience, without always fitting neatly into existing frameworks of accountability.
As their role expands, questions around transparency, oversight and responsibility will become harder to ignore.
For now, what is clear is this: in building its digital economy, India is adopting an innovative institutional design it. Time will tell, as to its lived ramifications.
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