Deccan Chronicle

TS needs 10,000cr for Dalit Bandhu every yr

- L. VENKAT RAM REDDY I DC

The state government had sanctioned `85,913 crore for the Scheduled Castes Developmen­t department by way of financial support to the SCs (Dalits) in the last seven years. It has, however, released `57,100 crore and spent much less, `47,685 crore.

The government will need to fully rework the SC developmen­t budget if it aims to extend financial support of `10 lakh per family as the Dalit Bandhu benefit.

Chief Minister K. Chandrashe­kar Rao has said that 13 lakh SC families are eligible for Dalit Bandhu, out of the estimated 15 lakh Dalit families in the state. He said one lakh to two lakh eligible Dalit families will be covered every year under the scheme. If one lakh

Dalits are covered a year, the state needs to allocate

`10,000 crore for the purpose. At this rate, it will take 13 years to cover all

13 lakh families.

This year, the government sanctioned `20,000 crore for SC Developmen­t. This includes Aasara pensions, Kalyana Laxmi,

2BHK scheme, ration, free power, fee reimbursem­ent, scholarshi­ps, Arogyasri, industrial incentives, bank-linkage loans for self-employment, roads, infrastruc­ture and tens of other welfare schemes. Against this backdrop, questions arise over the availabili­ty of funds for Dalit Bandhu scheme.

While addressing a Dalits’ meeting in his adopted village Vasalamarr­i on Wednesday, the CM made it clear: “None of the ongoing welfare schemes and developmen­t programmes will be halted due to the introducti­on of the Dalit Bandhu scheme. Dalits will continue to receive all these benefits as usual. Dalit Bandhu is only an additional benefit and not a replacemen­t for all other ongoing schemes.”

The SC department budget needs to be increased to 30,000 crore to meet the Dalit Bandhu expenditur­e to cover at least one lakh families per year from the present `21,306 crore. The sum is not enough to cover pending fee reimbursem­ent and scholarshi­p arrears of Dalit students for two years, the industrial incentives for Dalit entreprene­urs, and the banklinked loans for the uemployed Dalit youths for the past four years.

The total revenue expenditur­e of the state government last year (2020-21) was `1.33 lakh crore. Against this backdrop, doubts arise over the state’s ability to earmark `30,000 crore just for the SC Developmen­t department. In 2017, the TS government brought forward the Special Developmen­t Fund Act to earmark funds in the Budget proportion­ate to the population of the SCs and STs in the state. Though the budget figures meet this norm every year, there exists a wide gap between the promises and allocation­s. If unspent funds were transferre­d to subsequent years sincerely, as directed in the Act, the SC Developmen­t department should be overflowin­g with funds and there should be no pending unpaid arrears for Dalit beneficiar­ies.

The TRS government had launched a scheme for distributi­on of three acres of land to each Dalit family amid much fanfare in

2014. But the scheme could not become a success due to funds crunch. In the last seven years, only 6,662 Dalit families given 16,544 acres of land at a cost of

`735 crore. Later, the government almost shelved this scheme, saying government lands are not available in state and purchasing private lands became too expensive.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India