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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Cash Transfers and UID

Cash Transfers and UID

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published Published on Jan 1, 2013   modified Modified on Jan 1, 2013
-Economic and Political Weekly

We support cash transfers such as old-age pensions, widow pensions, maternity entitlements and scholarships. However, we oppose the government’s plan for accelerated mass conversion of welfare schemes to Unique Identification Authority (UID)-driven cash transfers. This plan could cause havoc and massive social exclusion. We demand the following:

(1) No replacement of food with cash under the public distribution system (PDS).

(2) Immediate enactment of a comprehensive National Food Security Act (NFSA), including universal PDS.

(3) Cash transfers should not substitute for public services.

(4) Expand and improve appropriate cash transfers without waiting for UID.

(5) No UID enrolment without a legal framework.

(6) UID applications should be voluntary, not compulsory.

(7) UID should be kept out of the PDS, National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) and other essential entitlement programmes for the time being as essential services are not a suitable field of experimentation.

Many of us have been part of struggles to expand social security pensions and improve their delivery. We support appropriate, people-friendly uses of modern technology for this purpose. However, we have serious reservations about the government’s rush to link these cash transfers to “Aadhaar”. This is because the linking of these schemes can cause huge disruption – think of an old man who is currently getting his pension from the local post office, but will now have to run around getting his “UID-enabled” bank account activated and then may find his pension held up by fingerprint problems, connectivity issues, power failures, truant “business correspondents”, and what not.

We are also firmly opposed to the introduction of cash transfers in lieu of food and other commodities supplied through the PDS, for many reasons. One, subsidised food from the PDS is a source of food and economic security for millions of poor families. In 2009-10, implicit transfers from the PDS wiped out about one-fifth of the “poverty gap” at the national level, and close to one half of it in states like Tamil Nadu and Chhattisgarh. Recent experience also shows that it is possible to further revamp and reform the PDS without delay.

Two, the banking system in rural areas is not ready to handle large volumes of small transfers. Banks are often far and overcrowded. The alleged solution – banking correspondents – is fraught with problems. Post offices could possibly be converted into useful payment agencies, but this will take time.

Three, rural markets are often poorly developed. Dismantling the PDS would disrupt the flow of food across the country and put many people at the mercy of local traders and middlemen.

Four, there are concerns of special groups such as single women, disabled persons and the elderly who cannot easily move around to withdraw their cash and buy food from distant markets.

Last but not least, inflation could easily erode the purchasing power of cash transfers. When the government refuses to index pensions or NREGA wages, how can it be trusted to index cash transfers to the price level? Even if some indexation does happen, small delays or gaps in price information could cause significant hardship for poor people.

The Kotkasim fiasco is a telling example of the potentially disruptive effects of inappropriate cash transfer schemes. The experiment was launched with much fanfare and immediately projected as a “stunning success” based on the fact that kerosene subsidy expenditure had declined by 80%, but in fact, the main reason for this decline was the collapse of the entire kerosene distribution system.

An impression has been created that the government is all set to launch UID-enabled cash transfers on a mass scale before the 2014 elections. This is very misleading, and looks like an attempt to make people rush to UID enrolment centres. This announcement also diverts attention from the government’s failure to enact a NFSA. The food security bill, very weak in the first place, has been languishing with a Standing Committee for a whole year. Meanwhile, food stocks are accumulating on an unprecedented scale. The need of the hour is a comprehensive NFSA, not a potentially disruptive rush for UID-driven cash transfers.

--MS Swaminathan, Bezwada Wilson, Shantha Sinha, Veena Shatrugna, Aruna Roy, Gautam Mody, Jean Drèze, Bina Agarwal, Utsa Patnaik, Amiya Kumar Bagchi, and 198 others

Economic and Political Weekly, Vol-XLVIII, No. 01, January 05, 2013, http://www.epw.in/letters/cash-transfers-and-uid.html


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