Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday in Washington called for collective responsibility to prevent the risks from aggravating, the PTI reported.


Sitharaman, who was speaking during the closing session of the G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors here being held on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, said that India’s efforts will be to encourage conversations that recognise. “Our inter-dependencies, our shared wisdom, and our collective aspiration for a safe, peaceful, and prosperous world,” she said.


According to the report, Sitharaman said today's global economy faces a confluence of challenges and "it is our collective responsibility" to prevent the risks from aggravating, while adding that India will head the annual rotating presidency of G-20 next year.


She said that India views the hosting of the G-20 Presidency as an opportunity as well as a responsibility. "Rebuilding trust in multilateralism is at the core of India's thinking,” she told her G-20 colleagues.


Sitharaman said that G-20 finance ministers have always come together in the harshest global situations, set aside their differences, and worked towards a common goal of prosperity for our people. As such, she urged the finance ministers and central bank governors to continue working together with this sense of solidarity.


The minister also observed that digitalisation has become the biggest advantage in India in the past two years and said that India’s public goods are available for countries that need them.


Sitharaman said the open-source network that the government of India has created as a public good is helping small and medium industries to scale up their operations.


“Standing here I want to reiterate that India's public goods are available for countries which so they need it,” Sitharaman told students of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) during an interactive session on India’s unique Digital Public Goods.


The minister asserted that India has a digital stack that other countries can use.


“So if India today can talk of a digital stack, it's not talking of just payment where UPI, which is today acceptable in Singapore, UAE, and many other countries,” she said.


“We are not talking of just Rupay cards, we are not talking of credit cards, we're not talking of checkbook, we're talking of QR codes, which an Android phone, not a smartphone, no apples, even anything else can just go to the business using a QR code, not just in India, but in countries with whom we've already agreed,” she said.


The National Payment Corporation of India has already had an agreement signed in France.


So, the apps that are under this larger umbrella of NPCI are all available there, be any other payment portal, the minister said.


“These are not charged for these public goods that we have created.” Reiterating that Indian public goods are available in other countries, she said that for instance, during Covid-19 pandemic India created an app wherein one could find the nearest hospital which could give them the vaccination for stores. And that platform would record it and immediately give them a certificate in the phone itself saying you've had this first dose in this first hospital, she said describing the other features of the app. And as a result of this, Indians travelling abroad didn't have to carry paper for proof of their vaccination.


Now, this app is available for any country which wants it. “Now this is the way in which technology is transforming education,” the minister added.