Direct Benefits Transfer
Direct Benefits Transfer
Direct Benefits Transfer
1. We first analyse Indias Direct Benefits Transfers program. 2. Then we move on to discuss about two of the most successful conditional cash transfer schemes in developing countries: Brazils Bolsa Familia, and Mexicos Oportunidades; and possibility of conditional schemes in India.
We picked Brazil and Mexico because, 1. Proven results over a long period 2. Close proximity of the two countrys economy and demographics to India
Overview
Direct Benefits Transfer aims to provide a one-step transfer of benefits to the beneficiaries, identified through their AADHAR. Government will transfer cash benefits like scholarships, pensions, NREGA wages, etc. directly to the Bank or Post Office Accounts of identified beneficiaries under the Direct Benefits Transfer (DBT) programme Direct cash transfers are meant to plug leakages and ensure that the needy are adequately empowered to avail themselves of the benefits due to them Currently, food/PDS is kept out of the ambit, to facilitate Food Security Act.
Why DBT?
To ensure the beneficiaries themselves get the benefits. Aims at better delivery, accurate targeting, reducing pilferage and corruption. Currently it costs the GoI Rs. 3.65 to transfer Rs. 1 worth of benefits to the poor. Also to help reduce diversion and adulteration of Kerosene and LPG cylinders. Over 90 million households expected to benefit, largest program of any kind in the world
For the rollout beginning on 1.1.2013, 43 districts in 16 States have been identified on the basis of Aadhar connectivity, for the first round of Direct Benefits Transfer under 26 selected schemes Initially beneficiaries will be able to withdraw from their own bank branches or ATMs or Business Correspondents (BCs) with handheld devices; wherever they exist. The system of micro-ATMs and multiple BCs will roll out subsequently with full inter-operability gradually. Beneficiaries can use their Aadhar to open bank accounts in preferred Kirana stores and use Micro-ATMs to withdraw. For example- Delhi Govts Saral money scheme
Structure
a.) Post-matric scholarship for SC students 7 districts; 48,000 beneficiaries (Puducherry, Nawanshahr, Fatehgarh Sahib, Gurdaspur, Anantpur, East Godavari, Diu)
b.) Pre-matric scholarship for SC students 1 district; 24,000 beneficiaries (East Godavari) c.) Post-matric scholarship Godavari, Daman, North Goa)
d.) Post-matric scholarship for ST students 3 districts; 4,800 beneficiaries (Tumkur, Waynad, Harda) e.) Indira Gandhi Matrutva Sahayata Yojana 6 districts; 55,000 beneficiaries (Dharwar, Puducherry, NW Delhi, Diu, North Goa, Amaravati) f.) Dhanalakshmi
g.) Stipend to trainees under the scheme of welfare of SC/ST job seekers through Coaching-cum- Guidance and Vocational Training 10 States, 650 beneficiaries (Karnataka, Kerala, Haryana, Punjab, Delhi, MP, Rajasthan, AP, Maharashtra, Jharkhand)
COSTS
One of the primary aim of the GoI by implementing DBT is to cut back its costs and burgeoning subsidy bill of Rs. 1,90,000 crores, through better targeting and plugging leakages. Rs. 3,20,000 crores- announced estimated annual payments. Initially, DBT will actually be a financial drag, with $1.2 billion in estimated net losses for the exchequer through March 2015, according to National Institute of Public Finance and Policy. The expected savings will come in the following six years and will total about $14.5 billion, or 15% of the budget deficit in the latest fiscal year.
In terms of inflationary costs, eventually depends on GoIs budgetary position. According to Kaushik Basu, the central government's DBT scheme would not have "any net effect" on inflation and that the scheme should be "indexed(Currently un-indexed) adjust with inflation, so as to maintain purchasing power
Current situation/Concerns
Infrastructural criticism
Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) has issued only 210 million Aadhaar numbers, less than 1/5th of Indias population. The penetration varies widely among States viz., above 50 per cent in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and a low of 5 per cent in UP. GoI on a bank branches, micro-ATMs opening spree, uncertain whether accomplished in time. Banking system in rural areas is not ready to handle large volumes of small transfers. Banks are often far and overcrowded.
GoIs efficiency in defining, identifying and targeting beneficiaries. Avoiding Denial by Design Serious problem of transition, especially if there is a time lag in opening an account in a bank, to receive the cash transferred, as evident from Pilot projects and researches by Jean Dreze and other Development economists. Vulnerability to fluctuating market prices Can be averaged out yearly based on forecasts. Cash subsidy should allow flexibility in the choice of commodity to the beneficiary. Inflation could easily erode the purchasing power of cash transfers. Even if some indexation does happen, small delays or gaps in price information could cause significant hardship for poor people.
Jharkhand Pension schemes/MGNREGS Early trials of cash transfers, head-start in the rollout. Cash obtained at a much faster speed Fraudulent and ghost beneficiaries busted Glitches in technology were on display in Tigra- villagers unable to withdraw cash from mini-ATM. In Ramgarh villages, only 9,000 people have biometric ID against the claimed figure of 43,801.
Mysore- LPG experiment Phase I - Targeted delivery of LPG cylinders using Aadhaar Phase II Subsidies delivered in Banks First phase completed without any glitches: Reduced black marketing significantly, waiting period for delivery from 7 days to 2 days. Next phase underway opening over 200,000 bank accounts.
The UID and DBT provides a platform amenable to technological innovations to resolve the numerous pinpricks that affect service delivery. Help the GoI to rein in fiscal deficit, and in turn, its positive feedback effects. Some positives from pilot projects for pensions/scholarship transfers(Tripura). Activists support DCTs when it pertains to providing social security pensions, scholarships, and maternity entitlementsin other words, schemes where the benefit is in the nature of cash to begin with.
oHowever, the low penetration of UID and banks in rural areas is a roadblock for the scheme. oGiven the failures of Pilot projects, the express timeline of DBT in food grains, kerosene, and fertilizers, is being fought to tooth and nail.
The hurried manner in which the well-intentioned move to pay NREGA wages through bank accounts almost killed the entire programme due to delays in payments. Reason: Either people did not have bank accounts or the branches were far away. Something similar is happening with DBTs again.
o Two empirical studies, by Jean Dreze and Reetika Khera and the other by the Delhi-based Rozi Roti Adhikar Abhiyan, indicate that the poor people indeed prefer food grains over cash transfer directly in their bank accounts. Emphasize reformed PDS model in Chattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh
Even if India had the infrastructure to pay through banks, it may still not be advisable to replace subsidised food grains by cash because while the market price of articles goes up instantaneously, the increased subsidy can happen only with a lag
The Government of India remains optimistic, it will overcome the teething troubles of DCTs and transition to a new order of welfare policy implementation unlike any seen in the worlds history. That, only time will tell.
Like many other developing countries Mexico has struggled to alleviate poverty and reduce income inequality. In the mid-90s, 30% of the general population, and in excess of 50% of the rural population, lived in extreme poverty. Currently, approx. 25 million Mexicans live in extreme poverty conditions. In 2002, the per-capita income of Mexico was $6,879.37 and only 18% of the population earned equal to or more than that implying income inequality.
INTRODUCTION
After the economic crisis of 1990s, reforms started taking place but still, the southern states have remained forgotten leading to great regional disparity.
Basic amenities like education, health service etc are sorely lacking leading to high illiteracy rates, unemployment and lower life expectancy. Insufficient infrastructure contributes to skewed development too.
The political system of Mexico has mostly been seen to favor the elite at the cost of the welfare of the rest of the population.
1.
Education Monetary educational grants to participating families for each child under 22 years of age who is enrolled in school between the third grade of primary and the third grade of high school. These grants are slightly higher for girls than boys after a certain level. Health - The health component provides basic health care for all members of the family, with a particular emphasis on preventive health care. This service is provided by government public health institutions. Nutrition - The nutrition component includes a fixed monetary transfer, equal to about $15.50 (155 pesos) monthly, for improved food consumption, as well as nutritional supplements for children between the ages of four months and two years, malnourished children aged 2 to 4 years, and pregnant and lactating women.
IMPLEMENTATION
2.
3.
4.
Targeting A poverty map was developed to find the poorest families most in need of assistance and these families were then ranked accordingly. The quality of Mexicos marginality index was also improved.
Children more likely to enroll in school. Dropout of students decreased by 23%. High school enrolment increased by 85% in rural areas.
HEALTH Increased preventive and curative health visits of beneficiary families. Maternal deaths and infant mortality declined by 11% and 2% respectively.
NUTRITION Decline is serious anemic cases. 20% reduction of sick days for children in rural areas. Reduction in stunting in urban areas. QUALITATIVE Elimination of education gap between men and women. Consumption of proteins, fruits and vegetables has increased significantly. Development of personal capabilities by helping domestic groups obtain credit.
PRESENT AND FUTURE POVERTY By the end of 2005, around 24 million people or 23.8% of Mexicos population benefited from the program. Small reduction in poverty headcount ratio (10%) but a larger reduction in poverty gap (30%) and poverty gap squared (45%). One percent reduction in terms of foodbased poverty line at the national level. In the rural areas, the poverty impact has been two or three times greater. By the end of the first year, average consumption levels had increased by 13% leading to 7.8% increase in the median calorie intake per person.
Fig: Poverty headcount ratio at national poverty line (% of population)
CONCLUSION
The impact of Oportunidades shows that conditional cash transfer programs of this nature can be an effective feasible instrument in both reducing current poverty as well as improving the future of children through increased investment in their health and education. Human capital investment is relevant to tackling the intergenerational transmission mechanisms of persistent deprivation.
It adopts a multidimensional approach to poverty which is in clear contrast to food aid inkind subsidies that dominated antipoverty interventions in the past. Much effort has been made to establish an image of Progresa-Oportunidades as existing independently of the president and party politics, to heighten chances it would survive transfers of power in the executive branch. The inclusion of rigorous impact evaluation protocols has meant that governments can test and improve programs effectiveness, while strengthening their legitimacy across different
Bolsa Familia
Launched on Oct. 20, 2003 by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Unified 4 major programmes: Bolsa Escola, Fome Zero, Bolsa Alimentao and Vale Gs. Aims to:
i) alleviate the income deprivation of poor households ii) break the intergenerational transmission of poverty.
CONDITIONS
Provides monthly transfer to poor households with children upto 15 years of age and/or a pregnant woman, and a monthly transfer to extremely poor households regardless of their composition. Government has rapidly expanded coverage of the BFP. Program covered 11.1 million families as of June 2006.
Impacts
Reduced income inequality. Noteworthy impact on reducing poverty. Among extremely poor households, transfers represent a sizeable portion of their total income.
Expenditures on food, education, child health and child clothing increased. Increased school attendance and decreased drop-out rates but also led to more children falling behind in school. Positive impacts on reducing wasting and stunting in infants. No impact on levels of vaccination of children. Positive impact on adult labour force participation. Impact being greater for women. Significant proportion of Brazil's poor population gained access to financial services. Approximately 600 thousand children, were still only working and not attending schools.
STATISTICS
Covers over 11 million families and costs close to 0.4% of the countrys GDP. Basic Benefit is a payment of R$60.00 for families with monthly per capita (p.c.) income below R$70.00. In addition, there is the Variable Benefit, according to which families with monthly per capita income below R$140.00 receive R$22.00 per child under age 15 (up to the maximum of 3 payments). Maximum benefit value in Bolsa Famlia is R$200.00 per family, which applies to families with monthly per capita income below R$70.00, 3 children under age 15, and 2 adolescents aged between 16 and 17.
Drawbacks
High level of unmet demand. Still does not cover around 3.4 million eligible homes.
The basic social services offered are insufficient to meet the needs of beneficiary families. Imbalance between rural and urban benefits with the programme having a rural bias.
Brazils experience shows that cash transfers, when implemented properly are at best a necessary condition for poverty alleviation. Supply-side constraints have to be removed if the increased purchasing power is not to lead to unbridled inflation that will hurt the poor badly. Indias investment in health, for example, is so low that it cannot handle more demands being made on the system. Creating such demand without measures to meet it would be irresponsible indeed.
making transfers difficult. Today, just about one-third of the population has bank accounts and changing
this scenario would require a lot of effort and expense. In Mexico, cash transfers have completely replaced food and in-kind subsidies. The same would lead to massive social exclusion in India as the transfer money would be squandered away by men, the main recipients of the program. Misuse of the program for political power is very likely in India. Already a significant number of early enrollees live in states controlled by the Congress party. In the case of Oportunidades, several steps were taken to ensure transparency and accountability like prohibition from signing up new beneficiaries within six months of national elections. The main argument against the chances of success of this program in India is that the infrastructural base in the country is very poor. Lack of schools and hospitals lead to expensive private education and
healthcare and thus increase the burden on the poor despite the transfers.
Bibliography
3.
The Hindu 2. Times of India Economic and Political Weekly 4. Businessline 5. Wall Street Journal 6. Businessthisweek 7. Economics Time 8. Business Standard 9. Wikipedia 10. The Economist
1.