Advertisement
India
AsiaSouth Asia

End of an era as typewriting tests phased out in India amid digital drive

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Candidates appear for the last official typing exam conducted by the state government in Mumbai. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

The unmistakable chatter of typewriters outside courthouses and government offices will soon fall silent in India’s financial capital Mumbai as stenography colleges on Friday hold their final manual exams.

The roughly 3,500 institutes teaching the antiquated ways of the typewriter across Maharastra state will be phased out as India pushes ahead with a drive to digitise the economy.

“It is absolutely the end of an era as typewriters bite the dust due to technological innovation,” Ashok Abhyankar, who runs a shorthand and typewriting institute in Mumbai, said.

Advertisement

Long relegated to the history books in the West, typewriters are still a ubiquitous feature at legal chambers, police stations and official offices in India.

Typists are found at courthouses punching out affidavits, family deeds and other legal documents for as little as 25 rupees (HK$3), the click-clack of the ancient machines echoing around the vaulted corridors.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x