1. ITM, Vashi
The Direct Cash Transfer Scheme
âAapka paisa aapke haath"
Assignment of Managerial Economics
Ashok Hegde, Arun Khedwal, Rutuja Dighe & Sanjeev Shrivastava
8/25/2013
The government aims to transfer Rs 4.0 trillion (one trillion is 100,000 crore) a year
to beneficiaries of its subsidy schemes and welfare programmes. The new scheme
aims to plug leakages in the current subsidy regime and will cover more than half of
India's population, making it the world's largest cash transfer programme.
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Contents
Sr. No. Index Page No.
1. About the Scheme 2
2. Executive Summary 3
3. Introduction 4
4. International best practices 5
5. Evolution in India 6
6. What is direct cash transfer scheme? 7
7. What is Aadhaar? 8
8. Benefits, Application & Risk model of
Aadhaar
9-12
9. India Implementation plan 13-16
10. India: Statistics 17-18
11. What are the challenges? 19-22
12. SWOT Analysis 23
13. Report Card 24-26
14. Recommendations 27
15. Conclusion 28
16. References 29
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About the Scheme
To meet the socio-developmental objectives of poverty elimination and inclusive
growth, a number of Government sponsored programs and schemes have been
introduced. However, efficiency and effectiveness have not been achieved by any of
the programs and schemes optimally. Rampant leakages and corruption have made
many schemes dysfunctional. Direct cash transfer scheme has been aimed to
mitigate these malaises. Direct cash transfer scheme aims to reduce leakages, cut
down corruption, eliminate middlemen, target beneficiaries better and speed up
transfer of benefits to eligible individuals. The broad thrust and evolution of direct
cash transfers along with its operation model in India. Also included is a critical
evaluation of the problems, impact, readiness of the scheme in India followed by
important inferences and suggestions. This programme is inspired by Bolsa Familia
plan of Brazil reveals the key ingredients of a successful cash transfer scheme.
Figure: 1.1 Direct Cash Transfer Scheme, India
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Executive Summary
Money
Transfer
ï± BPL (below poverty line) families would get âč 30,000 to
âč 40,000 per year. APL (above poverty line) will get the Cooking
gas subsidy.
ï± In all âč 4,00,000 Crore will be distributed in a year
How
When
Why
Challenges
ï± Families with Aadhar card will get money directly in their bank
a/câs
ï± New bank a/câs will be opened; Expansion of banks in rural area.
ï± In 51 districts the scheme was launched from January 2013 with a
target to cover the entire nation by April 2014.
ï± To check the leakages from the system & eliminate middle man
from the system.
ï± Ahead of 2014 elections, it is seen as big political thrust
ï± Only 400 million Aadhaars issued till date, which leaves 800 million
numbers to be issued before April 2014 which seems to be a tall task.
ï± About 188,000 villages had banking connectivity in June 2012
whereas India has 700,000 villages
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Introduction
The Government's Economic Survey for 2010-11 proposed a scheme of cash
transfers, which was followed by an announcement by the finance minister to replace
subsidies on goods with cash transfers. The announcement comes as a huge relief
for all who believe it will solve all problems of poor delivery, mismanagement, and
corruption by government agencies
In a recent study by the Planning Commission, it is ascertained that the Public
Distribution System (PDS) is so ineffective that 58% of the subsidized grains do not
reach the targeted group and almost a third of it is trajected off the supply chain.
According to the Finance Ministry, the inefficiencies of the PDS cause the
government to spend âč3.65 for transferring âč1 to the poor. To generate budget
savings and reduce corruption, the Government of India launched the Direct Benefit
Transfer (DBT) scheme on January 1st, 2013. The DBT program aims that
entitlements and benefits are transferred directly to the beneficiaries with the help of
biometric Aadhaar-linked bank account. The programme covers schemes like
education, scholarship for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and pension
to the widows. Food, fertilisers, and fuel have been kept out of its purview at this
time. The DBT scheme aims at cutting a subsidy bill of âč1,64,000 crores apart from
other benefits like better delivery, accurate targeting, broader choice, reducing
delays and corruption.
âAap ka paisa, aapke haathâ (your money in your hands) is the slogan coined by
UPA II to promote the âDirect Cash Transferâ scheme which would be rolled out in
phases, initially covering 43 districts (out of 51 announced earlier) from 1 January
2013 and then entire country (640 districts) by end 2013.
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International best practices
Cash Transfer schemes originated in middle-income Latin American countries that
had good infrastructure and supply systems. They were positioned as formal,
publicly provided safety net programmes that essentially supplied cash to the needy
and helped them tide over the period of economic crisis. The earliest of such
programmes, Progresa, was initiated in 1997 in Mexico with a new approach
integrating interventions in health, education and nutrition. It was based on the
understanding that these important dimensions were direct correlates of human
welfare. In Brazil the first CCT programme was started in 1996 with a focus on child
labour. While some more programmes based on the CCT philosophy were
introduced to address specific areas, these were integrated in 2004 into the now
well-known programme â Bolsa Familia. Other countries that initiated CCT
programmes include Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Jamaica, South Africa and Turkey.
In Asia, Bangladesh had a Female Stipend Programme as early as 1982 followed by
a Food for Education Programme in 1993. Food grants were later converted to cash
grants in 2002. Indonesia launched a pilot CCT programme called Programme
Keluarga Harapan (PKH) in 2007. Its beneficiaries are very poor households that
have pregnant women and/or zero to 15-years-old children. The PKH requires them
to access education and health services to be eligible for the cash transfer
Several countries including Jamaica, Philippines, Turkey, Chile, Mexico, Indonesia,
South Africa, Morocco and United States have adopted this system in the form of
Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) programs. Under such Programs, direct cash is
provided to the poor families on condition that itâs used for verifiable investments in
human capital, such as regular school attendance or used in attaining basic nutrition
and health care.
The largest and the most successful conditional cash transfer program is the Bolsa
FamĂlia Program (BFP) in Brazil that covered close to 100 percent of Brazil's poor in
2007. Under the programme, the government transfers cash straight to a family
subject to conditions such as school attendance, nutritional monitoring, pre-natal and
post-natal tests. The entire system is managed through efficient targeting,
disbursement and regular monitoring of the disbursed funds.
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Evolution in India
The government in order to leverage technology solutions and in particular the
Aadhaar i.e. the Unique Identification (UID) programme for this purpose, constituted
a task force on âDirect Transfer of Subsidies on Kerosene, LPG & Fertilizerâ headed
by Nandan Nilekani (Chairperson of UID Authority). The task force proposed the
Solution Architecture (Core Subsidy Management System (CSMS)) to achieve a fully
electronic back-office process for direct transfer of subsidy. The system would
automate all business processes related to direct subsidy transfer and can be
customized according to the business rules. At the very core of the system would be:
Aadhaar Integration, ERP Integration and Integration with nodal bank and payments
gateway.
The money will be directly transferred into bank accounts of beneficiaries. LPG and
kerosene subsidies, pension payments, scholarships and employment guarantee
scheme payments as well as benefits under other government welfare programmes
will be made directly to beneficiaries. The money can then be used to buy services
from the market. For eg- if subsidy on LPG or kerosene is abolished and the
government still wants to give the subsidy to the poor, the subsidy portion will be
transferred as cash into the banks of the intended beneficiaries.
For those who donât have access to bank branches, they rely on âBanking
Correspondents âor BC.
It is a poverty reduction measure in which government subsidies and other benefits
are given directly to the poor in cash rather than in the form of subsidies.
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What is direct cash transfer scheme?
As the name suggests, direct cash transfer is the direct transfer of government
subsidies and other benefits to the entitled people usually provided by the
government. In India, the UPA government is going to introduce the scheme to reach
out to poor people directly in order to plug leakages and cut delays in transfer of
subsidies to the poor. The areas that would be covered by the program include
scholarships, pensions and unemployment allowances and later MNREGA and
Public Distribution Schemes. It is assumed that it will help to bypass corrupt
middlemen, would help in cutting down wastage and duplication. It is fundamentally
being established to ease the burden of subsidies and letting the genuine
beneficiaries avail the advantage.
It will help the government reach out to identified beneficiaries and can plug
leakages. Currently, ration shop owners divert subsidised PDS grains or kerosene to
open market and make fast buck. Such Leakages could stop. The scheme will also
enhance efficiency of welfare schemes.
Figure: 6.0 Aadhaar based Direct Cash Transfer Scheme
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What is Aadhaar?
Aadhaar card, consisting a12 digit number issued for every individual, including
infants. Each individual of a family will have separate Aadhaar UID number. While
enrollment it verifies all the documents pertaining to an individual and collects
biometric information - photograph, ten fingerprints and iris through scanning. The
Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) will issue for all residents in India (on
a voluntary basis).
Figure: 7.0 UIDAI (Aadhaar UIDAI new logo)
Figure: 7.1 Aadhaars Prototype
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Benefits of Aadhaar
ï· Easily verifiable in an online cost effective way.
ï· It is unique and robust enough to eliminate the large number of duplicate and fake
identities in government and private databases.
ï· Aadhaar's guarantee of uniqueness and centralized, online identity verification would
be the basis for building these multiple services and applications, and facilitating
greater connectivity to markets.
ï· It would give any resident the ability to access these services and resources,
anytime, anywhere in the country.
ï· Aadhaar card can be used for opening Bank account, Gas connection, Ration card,
Phone connection, PAN card, Passport.
ï· It would also be a foundation for the effective enforcement of individual rights.
Problems in Banking Sector
Despite emerging technologies in banking sector, rural people didnât have access to
bank services, where 40% of the rural residents did not have bank accounts. As the
poor will transact in lower amounts banks will not find them attractive, as their
transaction costs are high.
Aadhaar authentication in banking
The strong authentication that UIDAI will vastly reduce the documentation that the
poor are required to produce for a bank account, and significantly bring down Know
Your Customer (KYC) costs for banks. So if every rural resident has an Aadhaar
card then the banks can help him or her opening an account with minimum costs
than earlier.
UID and its applications
Aadhaar card at present is issued on a voluntary basis. If it made mandatory it can
be used for various applications in different fields.
Government benefits
Government can transfer the benefit amount directly to the bank account of the
beneficiaries to which their Aadhaar card is linked. In this way we can avoid
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middlemen eating away the government fund. For the rural people if the bank
branches are not there in their village we can provide them the microATM facility
where he need to verify his identity by making a thumb impression on the microATM.
Then the person carrying the microATM will pay the benefit amount and the bank will
deduct this amount from the beneficiaryâs account.
Figure: 8.0 Direct Fund Transfer Scheme Flow diagram
Voting
Using Aadhaar card as Voterâs ID and implementing a technology at election counter
where voter can either type his Aadhaar number or swipe his card, we can eliminate
duplicates thereby reducing rigging in elections.
Criminal acts
In a huge country like India it is always difficult to capture culprits. if any cc camera
fortunately records video of culprit then by using that photo we can easily find out
through the database of UIDIA. Also in some criminal acts if we get the fingerprints
of the criminal, we can try to match them with the database and easily catch the
culprit.
Corruption
As Aadhaar card number is linked to a bank account, instead of ATMâs we can use
Aadhaar card to withdraw cash, pay bills, cash transfer etc. Corruption, a major issue
in India can be solved by this approach as we use the card for every transaction that
we make, so it is easy to find the persons who transact in large amounts or who
transact or spend more than their income. By this, illegal transactions can be
controlled and corruption can be easily controlled.
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Perfect authentication
Aadhaar UID uses biometric scanning to ensure the authentic identity of a person,
whereas a Voters ID, driving license, even a passport can be forged.
LPG Distribution
LPG for Domestic Cooking is heavily subsidized. So people are using fake
connections and misusing the benefits. If Aadhaar card is integrated with the
customer database of LPG we can eliminate illegal diversion of cylinders.
Mobile connections
Mobile connections are widespread and these connections can be used for anti-
national activities. If we authenticate all the mobile connections of a person by linking
them to his Aadhaar number we can have a control on the fake connections.
E-commerce
Due to cash on delivery payment system offered by various e-commerce players
there is a risk of a fake customer order or a customer denying that he didnât order it.
To avoid this we can authenticate the customer by asking his Aadhaar card number
and the mobile number, which is linked to the Aadhaar.
Figure: 8.1 Aadhaar Card: One card for all
One card for all
If the Aadhaar card consists of all the information including address, photo, PAN
card number, license details, Voter ID, ration card we can remove all the cards and
use only Aadhaar card for all purposes thereby reduce large amount of paper. Link
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all vehicle registrations to Aadhaar card, all PAN card details to Aadhaar card. So
Aadhaar card will be the only card providing Unique Identification.
Actions to be taken
To reap benefits from all this sectors, we need to make UID mandatory to all the
residents of India. So that in 20 years down the line every person in the country will
have UID cards.
As the population in India is huge it is difficult to implement and authenticate each
time in every sector when a person want to receive any benefit. It will require
massive amount of supercomputer, processing power, bandwidth and IT
infrastructure at local, district, state and central level. This needs more budgets to
implement. There are also concerns that personal data will be revealed if back
search is done and possible security threat exists as bank accounts are linked to
Aadhaar card.
Figure: 8.2 Risk Model of Aadhar
So when we consider the risk model we see that, as it requires huge technology and
expertise the ability to execute is less but if we implement it we have a great
opportunity for economic growth so we might face an implementation risk. But if a
proper budget is allocated and the necessary technology is made available in every
sector it moves to the sustainability quadrant and thereby we accomplish sustainable
economic growth.
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India Implementation Plan
Basic Idea
The money is directly transferred into bank accounts of beneficiaries. LPG and
kerosene subsidies, pension payments, scholarships and employment guarantee
scheme payments as well as benefits under other government welfare programmes
will be made directly to beneficiaries. The money can then be used to buy services
from the market. For eg- if subsidy on LPG or kerosene is abolished and the
government still wants to give the subsidy to the poor, the subsidy portion will be
transferred as cash into the banks of the intended beneficiaries.
Figure 9.0: The figure shows the old Subsidies & Direct cash transfer Flow
The twin pillars for the success of the system of Direct Cash Transfers are the
Aaadhaar Platform and Financial Inclusion. If either of these pillars is weak, it would
endanger the success of the initiative. For the initiative to succeed, the Finance
Ministry and the Unique Identification Authority need to work in close coordination to
achieve a collective goal.
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The immediate critical success factors are given below:-
The governmentâs efficiency in dealing with the fundamental issues like the basis of
targeting, definition of poverty line & identification of intended beneficiaries.
Effectively subsidizing the poor for fertilizer or kerosene once the prices are market
determined and are liable to fluctuate. Devising a methodology to transfer the cash
subsidy to the poor. State governmentâs endeavor in taking up fundamental reforms
required in Public Distribution System (PDS)
Phase-I Phase-II
Direct transfer of subsidy through state
governments/UT Administration.
States purchase commodity from
manufacturers at market price
Central government transfers the
differential subsidy directly to the state
govts./UT.
Subsidy amount is proportional to
commodity uplifted from the retail points
in a state/UT.
States reform their distribution system
based on the CSMS system proposed by
the Task Force.
Subsidy transfer to beneficiaries.
The cash equivalent of subsidy is
transferred directly to beneficiaries
through their bank accounts by linking
transactions to Aadhaar.
The commodity purchase and then
transfer of cash subsidy to their account
will be based on successful
authentication of the beneficiary through
Aadhaar at the point of sale.
The following steps have been taken by the government to guarantee a successful
implementation of the scheme:
An efficient Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) system would require the benefits
transfer system compatible with the banking system, transfer of funds to the
beneficiaries accounts and facilities for the drawl of the amount by the beneficiaries
as per their requirement. This will not only bring in greater efficiency in the transfer of
benefits but will also reduce pressure on the bank branches for dealing with these
transactions, reduce the requirement of multiple accounts for various schemes and
facilitate the process of financial inclusion.
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To ensure that every beneficiary of the government scheme has a bank account, the
banks must map the list of beneficiaries under every scheme, already available with
the state government, with bank account details. In case the beneficiary doesnât
have a bank account, a new bank account for the family in the service area branch
should be opened. Vice versa, as soon as the bank account gets opened, the
beneficiary should get mapped.
For those who donât have access to bank branches, they rely on âBanking
Correspondents âor BC. In May 2012, the Department of Financial Services (DFS)
chalked out a plan to split the country into 20 clusters for BCs. Each cluster is to be
managed by one BC company, elected by a price-based auction. The function of a
BC would be to pay the person who wants to withdraw money from his account in
case the person is not able to access an ATM or bank. The authentication by the
person would be given by a fingerprint on a micro-ATM.
The Central Plan Scheme Monitoring System (CPSMS) is a public financial
management reforms initiative of the government of India which monitors programs
in the social sector and tracks funds disbursed. It provides real time information
exchange with the banks providing greater transparency and accountability to social
sector. It provides a platform for schemes for making payments directly in the bank
accounts of beneficiaries. Departments using CPSMS should map the details of the
bank account of the beneficiary in the scheme database of the CPSMS. This should
also be brought to the knowledge of the beneficiary so that she/he is aware that the
benefits shall be electronically transferred to the bank account.
Aadhaar Payments Bridge (APB) is a repository of Aadhaar number of residents
and their primary bank account number used for receiving all social security and
entitlement payments from various government agencies. This is the bridge/platform
that will be used for the Direct Cash Transfer. APB requires using Aadhaar number
as the primary key for all entitlement payments. This would weed out all fakes and
ghosts from the system and ensure that the benefits reach the intended
beneficiaries. The key steps in posting payments via APB are:
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âą Service delivery agency that needs to make payments to its beneficiaries (such as
MGNREGA wages, scholarships disbursement, old age pension etc.) provides APB
File containing details of Aadhaar number, welfare scheme reference number and
the amount to be paid to its bank (called sponsor bank)
âą Sponsor bank adds bank IIN (Institute Identification Number provided by National
Payments Corporation of India âNPCIâ to participant banks) to the APB file and
uploads onto NPCI server
âą NPCI processes uploaded files, prepares beneficiary bank files and generates
settlement file. Settlement file is posted to bank accounts with RBI
âą Destination banks can download the incoming files for credit processing after the
settlement file has been processed
Figure 9.1: India Direct Cash transfer implementation plan from 1st
Jan-13 to 1st
April-14.
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Indian Statistics
The Prime Minister has set up three-tier architecture for monitoring the scheme. This
includes a national ministerial committee, a national executive committee and
implementation committees. The seven schemes that will now employ direct cash
transfers to beneficiariesâ accounts are mostly related to student scholarships and
stipends, the Indira Matrutva Yojna and the Dhanalakshmi schemes.
The states covered in the initial phase are Karnataka, Maharashtra, Delhi,
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Punjab and UTs of Pondicherry, Chandigarh and
Daman and Diu. Subsequently, four districts each of Himachal Pradesh and Gujarat
were exempted from the roll-out because of the assembly elections. This will be
extended to 11 more districts from February 1 in states including Kerala, Haryana,
Sikkim, Goa, Andhra Pradesh and Jharkhand and 12 more districts in states
including Tripura from March 1.
About Rs 32 lakh has been disbursed under the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT)
scheme through the Aadhaar Payment Bridge, the Planning Commission said.
Figure: 10.0 Cash transfer till July-13 â Top five states
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So far, over 40 crore Aadhaar enrolments have been done, and the Plan panel was
hopeful of achieving the target of 60 crore by 2014.
Among the States, the largest number of Aadhaar enrolments has been done in
Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra at 65,942, 390 and 62, 697,642, respectively, the
Plan panel said in a release.
The Government had allocated Rs 250 crore for various welfare programmes under
the DBT scheme launched about seven months ago covering distribution of LPG
subsidy, pensions, scholarships, Dhanalaxmi and Janani Suraksha Yojana.
Till June 30, 2013, a total of about Rs 35.53 crore was disbursed under the scheme,
and in July 2013 alone, about Rs 14.76 crore was disbursed.
âThe DBT is now being implemented in 28 schemes across 121 districts and soon a
review meeting will be done to take stock of its progress and to expand it to other
schemes and the remaining districts of the countryâ.
The government will disburse Rs. 4 lakh crore every year, with each BPL (below
poverty line) family getting between Rs. 3,000 and Rs. 4,000 a month in a
designated bank account. Each family will get its cash transfer on the basis of its
Aadhar or National Unique Identification (UIDAI) card.
The scheme has already been piloted for kerosene in parts of Rajathan, as well as
cooking gas in Karnataka. The scheme for cooking gas subsidies will also cover
eligible APL or above povery line families.
The Central cash transfer committee, that includes Ministers of finance, women and
child welfare, rural development, HRD, labour, petroleum, and fertilizer departments,
the Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission, the Unique Identification
Authority of India (UIDAI) chairman and the Cabinet secretary to chalk out the
intricacies of the roll out.
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What are the challenges?
Till now the cash transfer is done through post office and banks. But now it is about
to undergo a significant expansion in the scope of direct cash transfer. A change of
this magnitude might have challenges which the experts have analyzed and
government is yet to find a justifiable solution to it. Some of these are:
1) Will everyone receive their Aadhaar number in time: In three years, the
government has issued about 400 million Aadhaars, which leaves 800 million
numbers to be issued before April 2014 which seems to be a tall task.
2) Issued a bank account in time: According to the deputy governor of RBI, only 40%
of Indians have bank accounts. Talking about villages in particular, about 188,000
villages had banking connectivity in June 2012 whereas India has 700,000 villages.
The experience with bank accounts in the 43 stage-I districts may not be an
appropriate benchmark for the rest of India.
3) Will banking channel be ready in time: Currently, the banking correspondents
cover only 70,000 villages which require a further 10-fold expansion. At present, BC
companies are very few and even if the target is achieved it will take time to find
people and train them.
4) Who actually should benefit from the Direct Cash Transfer Scheme: The last BPL
census was done in 2002 and an overly optimistic estimate of the time by which the
new list would be ready is mid 2013, however a realistically optimistic deadline would
be Dec 2013. A major question in front of the Indian Government is that whether it
should use the 2002 list or wait for the new list. If it uses the old list then money
would keep going to a lot of people who should not be getting it and if it waits for the
new list by leaving the BPL programs out of the scheme, then a lot of benefits for
which it is originally planned will not be getting transferred. A separate issue to be
tackled is how to ensure that reasonably affluent families do not make it to the BPL
list as has happened in the part due to linkage of various government welfare
programs to the BPL list.
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5) Possible scam under its way: A September 2008 study by UKâs Overseas
Development Institute had found that India has 100 million migrant workers who are
mostly away from home. In some other cases, the bank transfers the subsidy to the
respective accounts but fraudsters divert it to some fictitious accounts by even
forging the signatures. With the entire banking system going on line, a dishonest
bank employee can even access the signatures of the poor borrower. This is
happening in several states.
Figure: 11.0 The picture showing the complicated path of the benifeciary.
Direct Cash Transfers, which are now becoming possible through the innovative use of
technology and the spread of modern banking across the country, open the doors for
eliminating waste, cutting down leakages and targeting beneficiaries better. It is also being
looked upon as a very effective tool in combating corruption when it comes to implementing
welfare programmes of the government.
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Report Card
The five states under DBT report that thousands of beneficiaries are left out of the DBT
coverage at every step of opening the Aadhaar-paired account
Jharkhand
When it comes to percolation of benefits through the
UPA governmentâs ambitious direct benefit transfer
(DBT) programme, Jharkhand fares the worst among
states. The programme remains a nonstarter in all
the four districts in the state where it was rolled out in
the first phase. And it is not difficult to figure out why.
This ignorance among government officials is
indicative of the stateâs progress in implementing the
ambitious programme of the UPA government.
Seraikella-Kharsawan, the first district in the state
under DBT since January, has more than 46,500
beneficiaries of different schemes. Only 500 are
receiving the benefits.
According to the status report of the National Payments Corporation of India, the gateway for
payment under DBT, released in March this year, cash benefits have returned from the bank
accounts of 10-15 per cent beneficiaries even though the accounts were integrated with
Aadhaar
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Maharashtra
Only Post-Matric scholarship beneficiaries from
Scheduled Castes and Other Backward Classes
On record, Wardha, Maharashtraâs pilot district for
DBT, has the highest percentage of Aadhaar
registrations for any district in the country.
According to the Unique Identification Authority of
India, 1.08 million Aadhaar cards (84.6 per cent)
have been generated against a population of 1.3
million. Some 360,000 beneficiaries have linked
their bank accounts with Aadhaar and the district
administration has disbursed Rs 2.07 crore to these
accounts. Despite high number of enrolments and
generation of Aadhaar IDs, cards are yet to reach
many in the district. Worse, the administration has
no clue about the number of missing cards and the reason they are missing.
Rajasthan
Udaipur, Ajmer and Alwar of Rajasthan are among the
first 20 districts in the country to roll out DBT in January.
Five months on, many beneficiaries say they prefer the
earlier system of payment through cash or bearer
cheques. Their aversion is not unreasonable. Barely 23
per cent of the beneficiaries in these districts have
received government benefits in their accounts since
DBT was introduced. Of the rest, most have been left out
of DBT as their accounts are not seeded with Aadhaar.
As of April, 24,000 of the 33,000 beneficiaries in Udaipur
were not receiving benefits due to this reason.
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Delhi
The Delhi government claims 95 per cent success in
providing an Aadhaar number to citizens. But its
achievement does not seem to be trickling down to the
poor of the national capital.
According to Dharampal, divisional commissioner of Delhi
and nodal officer of DBT for the state, Delhi has brought
nine Central schemes under DBT. Though 22,000
beneficiaries have Aadhaar cards and their UID numbers
seeded with bank accounts, only 9,000 are receiving
benefits. Dharampal says the state-sponsored Annshree
Yojana is doing well in comparison to the Central schemes
under DBT. All the 45,000 identified beneficiaries of
Annshree Yojana are receiving benefits. Their number
would increase to 100,000 in next couple of months, he
claims. Ground realities paint a different picture.
Andhra Pradesh
Only scholarship and pension beneficiaries Andhra Pradesh
is arguably the only state that was prepared to roll out DBT.
It ran a two-year campaign to enroll people under Aadhaar
and also experimented with models to implement DBT. In
the first phase, the state selected five districts where it had
already implemented a state-initiated cash transfer
programme for scholarship and pension schemes. According
to M V S Rami Reddy, deputy director general of UIDAI,
Andhra Pradesh, about 75 million of the 85 million
population in the state have been enrolled in the
programme. More than 58 million cards have been
generated. The five first-phase districts have a population of
27.5 million, of which 90 per cent have been enrolled in Aadhaar. The scheme was
successful in Andhra Pradesh
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Recommendations
Identification of beneficiaries
Selection criteria should be kept broad-based and inclusive. Lessons can be learnt
from the successful implementation of Brazilâs Bolsa FamĂlia Program.
Vulnerability to fluctuating market prices
Prices can be averaged out yearly based on forecasts. Cash subsidy should allow
flexibility in the choice of commodity to the beneficiary. The amount of subsidy
should be calculated based on the number of individuals per household rather than
assuming an average household size.
Transfer of cash subsidy
To expedite the implementation, bank accounts can initially be opened for one
member per household. The withdrawal can be done at bank branches and ATMs
through debit cards and through the business correspondent model using smart
cards, PoS devices, etc.
Infrastructure
We believe that the infrastructure must be built before starting a scheme and not
vice-versa
For Womenâs
It would be better if it is thoroughly meant for women, as they are responsible for the
household needs such as food, health, education, kerosene, LPG etc.
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Conclusion
The programme is inspired by such successful schemes existing in countries like
Brazil and Mexico and cities like New York and Washington. In India too, introducing
this new way of physically-delivering subsidies may seem a brilliant technological
shot to end the middlemen fraud, but the government still needs to substantiate its
fool proof preparedness against the trepidation it has been confronting from the
masses and quite a few experts.
The new system is expected to reduce this cost and subsidy bill through better
targeting.
If the entire system is managed through efficient targeting, disbursement and regular
monitoring of the disbursed funds this can result into transforming the rural India.
The real success of the policy lies in the accuracy and efficiency in identification of
worthy beneficiaries, i.e. BPL Households.
We would love to hear from you what you feel about the direct cash transfer scheme.
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References:
http://uidai.gov.in/
http://www.npci.org.in/documents/AEPSFAQBank.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unique_Identification_Authority_of_India
Website Referred:
ï· www.google.com
ï· www.wikipedia.com
ï· www.economicstimes.com
ï· www.thehindu.com
ï· www.youtube.com
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