Against this backdrop, India’s effort to bring women-led development as a priority marker in the G20 agenda is noteworthy. Further, it has accorded India an opportunity to showcase the ‘India’ story of the women-led development marked by PM Modi’s emphasis on the ideas of Nari Shakti. While the ambit of engagement is broad, there are three areas that deserve particular attention, as India scripts the development narrative, in a language that recognises the drivers of structural inequality, discrimination and violence that impact men and women differently. First, in the field of education, there are efforts to foster gender equity with a focus on STEM, and TechEquity, a Digital Inclusion Platform through which girls and women can skill, upskill and reskill themselves in digital literacy, financial literacy and other technical subjects. Second, India’s focus on leadership of women at local or grassroots levels a Jan Bhagidari or citizen’s engagement, and emphasis on women and climate change resilience. Third, it has accorded the much-needed push for engendering the variables of health, and food security. One of the critical contributions of its presidency included Poshan Tracker, a unique ICT platform developed as a governance tool for monitoring nutrition services and early childhood care service delivery for close to 100 million registered beneficiaries including pregnant women, lactating mothers, children under 6 years of age and adolescent girls across 1.4 million Anganwadi Centres.