Aadhaar is a novel and transformative reform; it must not be allowed to get a bad name early on - like, for example, disinvestment. The government, however, needs to address lot of issues to make it a success.
After eight-and-some years of minimal, marginal and timid reform, the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) suddenly seems to have discovered the possibility of fixing welfare delivery through cash transfers and the Unique ID system, and has pushed for a rapid roll-out of the Aadhaar framework.
It is due to be "rolled out" by January 1 - more precisely, as Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia said, the digitisation of the databases for some schemes in some districts will happen over January.
Within six months, the government claims most of the 29 schemes that are part of the initial Aadhaar framework will work in most of the selected 51 districts.
These are ambitious time frames, especially when it comes to the formidable scale of the enterprise - grafting existing welfare schemes onto a completely new transfer framework. Given the track record of the UPA when it comes to administrative reform and management, a certain amount of scepticism is to be expected.
No roll-out of something so revolutionary will be glitch-free; but there is every chance that some major problems will be reported. After all, some of the central questions about Aadhaar remain to be resolved, and depend on middle-level administrative machinery.
Identification is not yet perfect; nor is the authentication machinery. Banking penetration is still minimal, keeping the whole "cash in bank accounts" narrative imaginary at this point.
And, most importantly, questions of inclusion have not been solved. The central promise of Aadhaar, that it would be easy to enrol, has been betrayed by the insistence on various forms of address proof and so on at most local-level