Endorsing India’s governance reforms, a case study by Oxford University’s Said Business School has placed the PRAGATI (Pro-Active Governance and Timely Implementation) platform at the centre of the country’s rapid progress in infrastructure execution. Published in December 2024 and supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the study examines how India has transitioned from policy paralysis to delivery-driven governance by combining technology with leadership oversight.
Titled “From Gridlock to Growth: How Leadership Enables India’s PRAGATI Ecosystem to Power Progress”, the study presents PRAGATI as more than a digital dashboard. It describes the platform as a governance ecosystem that links the Prime Minister’s Office directly with Union ministries, state governments, and district administrations, ensuring that delays are flagged, responsibility is fixed, and decisions are enforced.
According to the study, since its launch in March 2015, PRAGATI has facilitated progress in over 340 critical infrastructure and social sector projects, together valued at approximately $205 billion. These include highways, railway lines, power projects, coal mines, bridges, gas pipelines, and irrigation initiatives, many of which had remained stalled for years due to procedural and coordination failures.
Leadership as the Driving Force
A central argument of the Oxford study is that PRAGATI’s effectiveness lies in the direct involvement of top political leadership. The Prime Minister personally chairs PRAGATI review meetings, during which long-pending projects are scrutinised, obstacles are identified, and timelines are imposed.
The study notes that this level of engagement has created a sense of urgency that traditional bureaucratic mechanisms often lack. Officials are aware that delays will be questioned at the highest level, and this awareness, the report argues, has fundamentally altered administrative behaviour.
Oxford researchers observed that PRAGATI reviews are not ceremonial. Instead, they are outcome-oriented sessions where ministries and states are required to present concrete progress updates. The presence of the Prime Minister, combined with real-time digital data, transforms what would otherwise be routine file-based monitoring into a high-stakes accountability exercise.
Bogibeel Bridge: A Symbol of Momentum
One of the most striking examples cited in the study is the Bogibeel Bridge in Assam, a strategically important rail-cum-road bridge over the Brahmaputra River. Conceived decades earlier, the project had suffered repeated delays due to logistical, financial, and administrative hurdles.
According to the Oxford analysis, PRAGATI reviews helped inject renewed momentum into the project. The Prime Minister’s direct monitoring ensured coordination between the Railways, Defence, and state authorities, helping resolve bottlenecks that had previously slowed progress.
The study argues that such oversight does more than accelerate construction—it sends a message down the administrative chain that national priorities cannot be indefinitely delayed. Workers, engineers, and officials on the ground, the report notes, often draw motivation from knowing that their project is being monitored at the highest level.
A recurring theme in the Oxford study is the strategic use of enforceable deadlines. Large infrastructure projects in India typically involve multiple agencies, land acquisition challenges, environmental clearances, and law-and-order issues. Without firm timelines, projects often drift.
The case of the Pakri-Barwadih coal mine in Jharkhand illustrates this point. Approved in 2006, the project remained stuck for nearly a decade, primarily due to compensation disputes and local resistance. When the project came under PRAGATI review in 2016, the Prime Minister directed the state government to resolve compensation and security concerns within a fixed two-month period.
While the study acknowledges that PRAGATI alone did not eliminate all challenges, it emphasises that the directive marked a turning point. Clear timelines compelled stakeholders to act, and the project eventually became operational in 2019. Oxford researchers describe this as a classic example of how leadership-backed deadlines can convert intent into execution.
Breaking Silos Within Ministries
Beyond individual projects, the Oxford case study highlights PRAGATI’s role in driving institutional reform within ministries. One such instance involved the Ministry of Railways, where delays in approving general arrangement drawings, a prerequisite for construction, were causing widespread project slowdowns.
During PRAGATI reviews in 2017, these approval delays were flagged as a systemic issue. The Prime Minister encouraged the ministry to adopt a technology-driven solution rather than rely on manual, paper-based processes. This intervention ultimately led to the launch of an electronic drawing approval system in 2020.
The digital platform enabled online submission, review, and approval of drawings, drastically reducing processing times. Oxford researchers argue that this reform had a cascading impact, accelerating multiple railway projects simultaneously rather than addressing delays on a case-by-case basis.
Cooperative Federalism in Action
Another key strength of PRAGATI identified by the Oxford study is its ability to foster collaboration across states and ministries. Infrastructure projects often cut across state boundaries, making coordination a major challenge.
The Ennore-Thiruvallur-Bengaluru-Puducherry-Nagapattinam-Madurai-Tuticorin gas pipeline project serves as a prime example. Spanning three states and affecting nearly 400 villages, the project faced persistent right-of-way disputes that threatened its viability.
In a 2018 PRAGATI review, the Prime Minister directed the governments of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh to authorise a single implementing agency to negotiate with landowners. This simplified negotiations, reduced conflicts, and helped resolve disputes more efficiently. The pipeline was eventually completed in January 2024.
The Oxford study notes that such interventions demonstrate how PRAGATI operationalises cooperative federalism, not through rhetoric, but through problem-solving frameworks backed by authority.
Importantly, the study argues that PRAGATI’s impact is not limited to monitoring. By creating a shared platform where issues are openly discussed, the system fosters a culture of collective responsibility.
Officials interviewed for the study reported that PRAGATI meetings often serve as a forum for learning best practices from other states and ministries. When one department successfully resolves a bottleneck, its approach can be replicated elsewhere.
Oxford researchers also observed that the platform has helped reduce blame-shifting, a common feature of large projects. Since issues are visible to all stakeholders, responsibility becomes clearer, and excuses harder to sustain.
Policy experts cited in the study argue that PRAGATI represents a shift in how governments approach execution. Instead of creating new layers of bureaucracy, the platform strengthens existing structures by aligning them around clearly defined outcomes.
By combining real-time digital monitoring, top-level leadership, and inter-agency coordination, PRAGATI has helped dismantle what the report describes as “bureaucratic inertia.” Analysts note that while technology is an enabler, it is leadership engagement that gives the system its force.
The Oxford study concludes by situating PRAGATI within a global context. Many countries, it notes, struggle with translating infrastructure plans into reality due to fragmented governance and weak accountability.
PRAGATI’s model, anchored in leadership-led reviews, digital transparency, and collaborative problem-solving, offers valuable lessons for governments seeking to improve delivery outcomes. While the system is tailored to India’s administrative structure, its core principles are transferable.
The study cautions, however, that such platforms require sustained political commitment. Without consistent leadership engagement, even the most sophisticated digital systems risk becoming symbolic rather than transformative.
As India continues its push toward becoming a $5 trillion economy, the Oxford study positions PRAGATI as a critical instrument in aligning ambition with execution. By bridging the gap between decision-making and delivery, the platform has helped convert long-delayed projects into visible outcomes.
While challenges remain, particularly in land acquisition, environmental clearances, and local resistance, the study’s overarching conclusion is clear: PRAGATI has redefined how India manages complexity at scale.
From stalled bridges to cross-country pipelines, the Oxford analysis presents PRAGATI as a governance innovation that has turned oversight into action, and leadership into momentum, offering a compelling blueprint for infrastructure-led growth in the digital age.


















