Government has eliminated 16 million duplicate and bogus ration cards that will help save about Rs 100 billion in subsidy bill annually, said Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa. In addition, the government has saved Rs 148.72 billion by offering subsidy on cooking gas (LPG) directly to consumers and direct benefit transfer (DBT) is planned to be extended to 150 schemes by the end of this year, he told PTI here.
DBT makes use of Aadhaar or the unique identification number to identify beneficiaries, under which benefits are transferred directly to their bank accounts, thus preventing diversion and misuse. This has resulted in removal of duplicate beneficiaries, which has led to significant savings across welfare schemes. “That (the total savings made from using DBT) estimate differs from scheme to scheme. We are yet to compile that. There are some indications about weeding out of bogus ration cards. So, more than 16 million ration cards have been weeded out,” said Lavasa, who also holds the charge of the Department of Expenditure.
“And on this account alone, the estimation is about Rs 100 billion savings.” As on March 31, 2015, there were 110 million households with public distribution system (PDS) ration cards. Similarly, DBT on LPG, code named PAHAL, has helped weed out Rs 35 million duplications and bogus users, helping save Rs 149.82 billion in annual fuel subsidy. “Same is the response in MNREGA, about 10 per cent savings have been reported in 2015-16 because of elimination of bogus job cards,” he said.
Citing an example, the secretary said Haryana has informed the Centre that it has wiped out 6,00,000 fake beneficiaries for kerosene. The government intends to extend DBT to other schemes for better targeting and stamping out bogus users, thus checking diversion to non-intended beneficiaries, he said. “The intention of the government is that by the end of this year, we have about 150 schemes which we want to cover under DBT. Till April this year, we have extended it to about 65-odd schemes. So, more than doubling,” he said.
Nearly 310 million beneficiaries, Lavasa said, have been covered by DBT and more than Rs 19 million disbursed to them directly under various schemes like MNREGA and PAHAL. DBT for kerosene was to be rolled out next with a pilot project to be soon launched in 33 districts, he said, adding that a similar test run for food and fertiliser is in the offing in select districts this year. A national scholarship portal is being created that will integrate all scholarship schemes handled by different departments to make it more transparent and easy to administer.
“The intended beneficiaries will have access to all the data through our portal. It avoids duplication of work,” he said, adding that pension payment would be integrated too. According to Lavasa, DBT is a way of rationalisation, systematising and computerising schemes. “Once you start systematising things, these are the unintended benefits and these benefits are there for everybody,” he added.
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