With government-to-person (G2P) payments, governments increasingly disburse welfare benefits directly to individuals or households. While promising, digital G2P payments remain in their early stages, and face challenges, such as friction in payments, information gaps, and contextual barriers. The MUKTA program in Odisha, India, is an example of a multi-stakeholder collaboration to reengineer digital systems and government policies and processes to operationalize digitally-enabled Smart Contracting and Just-in-Time funding systems (JiT-FS).
Background:
How far would a dollar go if it went straight to someone in need when they need it most?
With government-to-person (G2P) payments, governments increasingly disburse welfare benefits directly to individuals or households. These high-volume, low-ticket-size G2P transactions are vital to boost financial inclusion and empower vulnerable communities. Globally, programs such as Brazil’s Bolsa Familia and Zambia’s supporting women’s livelihoods (SWL) report cost savings, leak reduction, and timely payments for grant recipients through digital payments. In India, Jan Dhan bank accounts, Aadhaar for identity verification, and mobile payment applications enabled by the Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AePS) and Unified Payments Interface (UPI) have boosted financial inclusion. These have allowed government programs to incorporate direct benefits transfers (DBT).
While promising, digital G2P payments remain in their early stages, and face challenges, such as friction in payments, information gaps, and contextual barriers. The MUKTA program in Odisha, India, is an example of a multi-stakeholder collaboration to reengineer digital systems and government policies and processes to operationalize digitally-enabled Smart Contracting and Just-in-Time funding systems (JiT-FS). It has enhanced program’s reach, improved observability, and provided a clear understanding of performance bottlenecks. Additionally, it has empowered stakeholders to refine and optimize the system continuously.
Admirable goal, administrative friction
MUKTA is a pioneering initiative designed to generate wage employment for vulnerable workers in urban Odisha during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rooted in community needs and responsive to local demands, MUKTA uses existing community-based organizations (CBOs) to execute public works projects that are sustainable and climate resilient. These CBOs enlist wage seekers to work on these projects and generate income for them.
Delayed payments to CBOs and wage seekers were a key challenge in program implementation. Beneficiaries faced lengthy wait times. Additionally, a baseline study across two pilot urban local bodies (ULBs) found that more than 50% of completed tasks were not processed for payment, and the rest encountered delays that exceeded one month. Wage seekers come from low-income households, and such delays undermine the program’s welfare objectives.
Such delays arise largely from cumbersome, paper-based compliances, billing, and verification processes. Every step—from attendance tracking and bill submission to verification, approvals, and payment instructions—relied on manual processes. It increased the administrative burden on local government personnel, who were overburdened already. These long-drawn processes also resulted in the underutilization of sanctioned funding as funds were parked idle in banks and had limited transparency.
Making processes and payments smarter
These challenges threatened to undermine MUKTA’s goals. It was clear that a transformative intervention was required. MUKTA embraced a three-phase “Smart Payments” approach to address these challenges:
Extensive consultations with stakeholders at each government tier helped identify key requirements to complete payments under the MUKTA program and administrative inefficiencies that prevented timely completion. The tiers included the Finance Department (FD), Housing and Urban Development (H&UD) Department, local government officials, and CBO representatives.
Such programs require multi-entity coordination. Project definition, estimate creation, progress monitoring, and bill approval occur at the local government level. The state government sanctions overall fund tranches and executes electronic payments. The first step in the solution was to identify the information the state government would need to disburse payments and find a way to communicate it most efficiently. We used existing Integrated Financial Management System (IFMS) and Public Finance Management System (PFMS) data standards to develop functional requirement specifications. This further led to the development of a two-part solution: MUKTASoft, which streamlines processes and reporting through program implementers, and JiT-FS, which simplifies and speeds up fund disbursal.
MUKTASoft is a workfare program management platform that streamlines project management and information flow among CBOs, local government bodies, H&UD, and FD. The expedited flow of standardized project information is key to reduce payment delays. MUKTASoft’s key operational components include project finalization, wage-seeker registration, digital attendance tracking, expense logging, and payment verification. All of these are streamlined through user-friendly interfaces for different users, such as CBO and ULB officials, among others.
MUKTASoft was designed to improve the overall efficiency of local and state government officials with consideration of the administrative burden-related challenges. This was done by:
The alignment of project management and program verifications set the stage to integrate Smart Payments and use digital technologies, such as JiT-FS, for pull-based release of funds once project milestones were achieved. Core PFM principles, such as “single source of truth” (to ensure data accuracy), “observability” (real-time tracking of performance), and “minimization of administrative burden” through smart contracts, have been woven into the design of both MUKTASoft and JiT-FS to strengthen transparency, accountability, and efficiency in the system.
The implementation phase required multiple dependencies’ management. A fundamental challenge was to build trust and reliability in the solution to replace manual ways of working because of its high success rate. The deployment timeline faced disruptions, and development hurdles were common initially, as is typical when new systems are integrated for the first time. However, collaborative testing uncovered edge cases that affected transaction success rates, and a robust user testing phase helped validate various scenarios and user needs.
Checks and balances were introduced and implemented within MUKTASoft and the JiT module to address these emerging issues. For instance, at the project finalization stage, MUKTASoft checks for the availability of funds to cover the project’s expenses. This sanction validation establishes a spending ceiling before the approval of projects or payments. This was a key control that the State Finance Department must maintain. Similarly, when payments are directly transferred to wage-seekers’ bank accounts, each transaction’s success or failure must be checked, and corrective measures must be taken where payments fail.
Local governments, while initially hesitant, saw that MUKTASoft’s use for project creation, estimate approval, and work orders had tangible benefits. These included reduced administrative burden, fewer delays, faster payments, and enhanced accountability. With a clear demonstration of the value to all stakeholders, the adoption of the solution became universal.
Maximized impact: Outcomes of successful deployment
Lessons learned:
The system is being scaled to 25 ULBS out o 115 in Odisha after the pilot’s success in two ULBs. MUKTA’s journey offers valuable lessons for other G2P initiatives that seek to use technology for efficient PFM and inclusive development:
Other G2P programs can unlock technology’s transformative potential to deliver effective social safety nets, empower vulnerable communities worldwide through these lessons, and build upon MUKTA’s success.
Smart Payments as a catalyst for inclusive development
The early success observed with Smart Payments for the MUKTA program underscores technology’s transformative potential in G2P transactions to reduce delays in service delivery and heighten public finance efficiency. It serves as a model for government agencies and prompts them to adopt smart payments as a catalyst for inclusive development.
Odisha’s journey is a model for an efficient and citizen-centric benefit delivery system, which emphasizes the need for adaptive strategies, collaborative partnerships, and a commitment to governance principles. Tailored to the local context, the solution can progress from basic Smart Payments, that encompasses digital recording of conditional payments and compliances, to a medium level incorporating workflow management systems and APIs. The ultimate moonshot solution integrates artificial intelligence or machine learning models, smart devices, and Internet-of-Things (IoT) to revolutionize the public finance landscape.
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