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Consider the following statements regarding the "Common Services Centre (CSC)":

  1. They are part of the Digital India programme

  2. They are implemented on public-private partnership modal

  3. They are provided exclusively by the government

  4. They act as access points for the delivery of various electronic services


Select the correct answer using the code given below:
Options:
A .  (i) & (ii) only
B .  (iii) & (iv) only
C .  (i) & (iii) only
D .  (i), (ii) & (iv) only
Answer: Option D
Answer: (d)
The concept of the Common Services Centre (CSCs) was approved in 2006 as part of the National e-Governance Plan. CSCs are set up in a public-private partnership model, with a designated state agency being a franchisor of sorts for village-level entrepreneurs (VLEs) to set up centres.
VLEs must meet a set of minimum requirements. They must have passed a matriculation-level examination by a recognized board, be fluent in reading and writing the local language, and make arrangements for infrastructure. Presently there are close to 2,00,000 CSCs across India.
CSCs help people apply online for a range of services — passport registration, PAN cards and Aadhaar cards, banking correspondents, and a whole host of other certificates, and without them, people will have to visit a government office. CSC operators scan documents and upload them through a portal to the relevant government office that will then send back a completed certificate or card. They are like cyber cafes, except they connect only to Digital India.
CSCs are a cornerstone of the Digital India programme. They are the access points for the delivery of various electronic services to villages in India, thereby contributing to a digitally and financially inclusive society. CSCs are more than service delivery points in rural India. They are positioned as change agents, promoting rural entrepreneurship and building rural capacities and livelihoods. They are enablers of community participation and collective action for engendering social change through a bottom-up approach with a key focus on the rural citizen.
CSCs enable the three vision areas of the Digital India programme:
Digital Infrastructure as a core utility to every citizen
Governance and services on demand
Digital empowerment of citizens
Over the past three or four years, a huge number of these centres have added services like banking and insurance to their offerings.
In a sense, they are an organic response to the growth in demand for digitized government services that a piece of static State machinery cannot keep up with and the free market has seemingly ignored.

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