Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

BPL pension may be increased

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Narendra Modi government is working on a plan to increase the pension it provides to people over the age of 60, widows, and disabled persons, all from so-called Below Poverty Line (BPL) households from the current ~200-1,000 a month to around ~1,600, with some of the increase coming from the states.

NEW DELHI: The Narendra Modi government is working on a plan to increase the pension it provides to people over the age of 60, widows, and disabled persons, all from so-called Below Poverty Line (BPL) households from the current ~200-1,000 a month to around ~1,600, with some of the increase coming from the states.

The pensions are all part of the National Social Assistance Programme, on which the Central government spent around ~9,300 crore in 2014-15; around 31 million people from poor households benefited from the schemes that year. The Union rural developmen­t ministry wants the Centre’s share to be at least ~1,000 a month in each case according to Amarjeet Sinha, the Union rural developmen­t secretary. That represents a significan­t increase from the ~200 a month the Centre currently pays as pension to people between the ages of 60 and 79, widows between the ages of 40 and 59 (they become eligible for old age pension thereafter), and disabled persons under the age of 59 .

In the first case, the Centre doesn’t mandate a contributi­on from states, although many states do add something to the amount. In the second and third cases, it mandates an equal contributi­on from the states. “We may go for a matching grant in a 60:40 ratio between the Centre and the states,” added Sinha.

The rural developmen­t ministry is in talks with the finance ministry on the proposal.

States currently provide top-up doles to the Centre’s contributi­on. While some states like Delhi and Andhra Pradesh have substantia­lly increased allocation in a bid to provide a respectabl­e pension, in many states the pension amount remains miserably low. In early 2017, the Arvind Kejriwal government in Delhi increased the pension for people between the ages of 60-69 to ~2,000, and to widows and disabled persons to ~2,500 per month.

There have been several protests in the past demanding an increase in the pensions. When Jairam Ramesh was the Union minister for rural developmen­t, he had described the stingy scheme as “an insult to dignity.”

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