What is National e-Governance Plan (NeGP)?
Historical Background
Key Points
10 points- 1.
The core of NeGP is to create a digital infrastructure that connects various government departments and enables them to deliver services online. This includes setting up networks like State Wide Area Networks (SWANs) to connect district and block offices, and Common Service Centres (CSCs) in rural areas, acting as access points for citizens who may not have internet at home. The goal is to ensure that a citizen can access any government service, from anywhere, at any time.
- 2.
NeGP focuses on 'Mission Mode Projects' (MMPs). These are specific projects for individual government services or sectors, like land records (Bhoomi project), passports (Passport Seva Project), or tax administration. Each MMP is designed to re-engineer the underlying government process to make it more efficient and citizen-friendly before digitizing it. This ensures that we are not just digitizing old, inefficient systems.
- 3.
A critical component is the National e-Governance Services Delivery Gateway (NSDG). Think of it as a central hub or a switchboard for government services. It allows different government applications to talk to each other and enables citizens to access services through a single portal or interface, rather than having to visit multiple websites. This simplifies access and reduces the need for citizens to remember many different login IDs and passwords.
Visual Insights
National e-Governance Plan (NeGP): Core Components and Evolution
This mind map illustrates the foundational elements of NeGP and its evolution towards modern digital governance, including its connection to Digital India and AI.
National e-Governance Plan (NeGP)
- ●Core Objective: Citizen-Centric Service Delivery
- ●Key Infrastructure & Components
- ●Mission Mode Projects (MMPs)
- ●Evolution & Integration
- ●Legal & Security Framework
Recent Real-World Examples
1 examplesIllustrated in 1 real-world examples from Apr 2026 to Apr 2026
