Published on 06 May 2026
Disclaimer
This post refers to selected commitments from the West Bengal
BJP Manifesto (Bhoroshar Shopoth).
The interpretation is limited to one specific promise and is
viewed through the lens of Digital Transactions (April 11 – Proposed). For
complete details, please refer to the official manifesto document.
Awaiting the Rollout | From
promise to system
A woman boards a bus.
No cash exchanged. No hesitation.
Just a system that recognizes—and responds.
This is not just mobility.
This is a transaction.
The Selected Signal: Page 5 – Women
On page 5 of the manifesto, under the Women
section, one promise stands out:
👉 Free
transportation for women in state-run buses
At first glance, it appears as a welfare commitment.
But structurally, it is something deeper:
A daily, repeatable, high-frequency transaction system.
Unlike one-time benefits, this creates:
- continuous
interaction
- real-time
validation
- behavioral
data flows
- system-level
accountability
This is where Digital Transactions thinking becomes
critical.
Two Possible Models: Delhi vs
Karnataka
1. Delhi Model – Smart Card-Based Access
📌 Concept:
Pre-issued smart cards for eligible women
📌 Interaction: Tap → Validate
→ Travel
How it works:
- Women
are issued smart cards linked to identity
- Entry
into buses is authenticated digitally
- Backend
systems track usage, routes, frequency
Why it matters (Digital Transactions lens):
- Creates
a closed-loop transaction system
- Enables:
- usage
analytics
- fraud
detection
- policy
calibration
- Moves
toward account-linked governance
📖
Suggested Reading:
- Delhi
Transport Smart Card System
- https://delhi.gov.in (Transport section)
2. Karnataka Model – Aadhaar + Zero Ticket
📌 Concept:
Show ID → Receive ₹0 ticket
How it works:
- Women
present identity (Aadhaar or ID)
- Conductor
issues a zero-value ticket
- Transaction
recorded, but not prepaid
Why it matters:
- Fast
rollout
- Minimal
infrastructure dependency
- Lower
entry barriers
But:
- Relies
heavily on manual validation layers
- Data
capture may be fragmented
- Limited
real-time system intelligence
📖
Suggested Reading:
- Karnataka
Shakti Scheme (Free Bus Travel for Women)
- https://ksrtc.karnataka.gov.in
Strategic Insight: Likely Rollout
Path
A practical rollout in West Bengal could follow a phased
model:
Phase 1 – Karnataka Model (Speed)
- Immediate
implementation
- Aadhaar
/ ID-based validation
- Zero-ticket
issuance
👉
Objective: Visibility + Political Delivery
Phase 2 – Delhi Model (System Depth)
- Gradual
introduction of smart cards / digital identity layers
- Integration
with:
- transport
systems
- citizen
databases
- mobility
analytics
👉
Objective: Efficiency + Data-Driven Governance
The Real Story: Beyond Free Travel
This is where the core thesis comes alive:
Digital Payments are moments.
Digital Transactions are journeys.
Free transportation is not just:
- a
subsidy
- or a
benefit
It is:
- a daily
authentication loop
- a mobility
transaction layer
- a state-citizen
interaction engine
Each bus ride becomes:
- a
data point
- a
policy signal
- a
system feedback mechanism
Why This Matters for Digital
Transactions Day (April 11 – Proposed)
If viewed correctly, schemes like this can evolve into:
- Mobility
wallets
- Integrated
transport identity systems
- Cross-subsidy
tracking mechanisms
- Real-time
governance dashboards
And most importantly:
👉 A shift
from entitlement delivery →
transaction ecosystems
Closing Thought
A woman boards a bus.
If the system only lets her travel—
it is welfare.
If the system recognizes, records, adapts, and improves—
it becomes a Digital Transaction.
And that is where the future quietly begins.
Once the new BJP Government in West Bengal, slightly settles
down, this manifesto promise should go live. This is tested in other parts of
country, and should not be a major challenge for the rollout.
The main advantage is that there are ZERO Leakages.
✍️ The Joy of
Digital Transactions
Nayakanti Prashant
Citizen Advocate – Digital Transactions Day (April 11, Proposed)
Author’s Blogs
https://prashantrandomthoughts.blogspot.com
https://prashantnepayments.blogspot.com
https://innovationinbanking.blogspot.com
