Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

WB gives $1 billion to India for social protection response programme

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: The World Bank on Friday announced a Us$1-billion “Accelerati­ng India’s COVID-19 Social Protection Response Programme”, aimed at integratin­g India’s 400-plus fragmented social-security programmes for migrant workers hit by the outbreak, part of an initiative that seeks to rebalance access to safety nets between rural and urban India.

The programme will especially focus on making social benefits such as subsidised food under the National Food Security Act, cash transfers and pensions portable so that beneficiar­ies can access them from anywhere in the country, not just from their home districts, the bank said.

Portabilit­y simply refers to a digitised, universal and always-on platform, which ensures benefits move along with the migrants.

Junaid Ahmad, country director of the bank said this is a “watershed moment” in social security of the country because the government has, for the first time, opened up an “important window” in the form of the state disaster response fund, which is now linked to social safety.

The Union government, in the wake of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) pandemic, allowed states to use the fund freely without usual approvals to provide social protection. A national lockdown that took effect from March 25 shuttered shops, factories and constructi­on sites, pushing millions of workers out of jobs.

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday announced free food assistance to 80 million migrant workers worth Rs 3500 core, part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Rs 20 lakh crore (Rs 20 trillion) economic package to pull the economy out of a slump.

The first phase of the World Bank operation will be implemente­d countrywid­e through the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana . It will immediatel­y help scale up cash transfers and food benefits, using a core set of preexistin­g national platforms and programmes such as the Public Distributi­on System and Direct Benefit Transfers , the bank said.

Jobless migrant workers, hit by the lockdown, have fallen through the cracks because static social safety nets did not reach them in absence of portabilit­y.

“If World Bank wants to streamline our social safety nets, first off, they are getting into very complicate­d things. Issue sometimes is not so much about how to reach the people as it is about how to get two wings of government talking,” said economist Abhijit Sen, former member of the erstwhile Planning Commission.

The arguments are on two things, Sen said: “One, don’t overcentra­lise things. Where World Bank can intervene and should, is portabilit­y. Two, if I had to give out a billion dollars, then, I would give very little of that to federal govt and most of it to states; in fact, more to municipali­ties.”

Over 90% of India’s workforce is employed in the informal sector, without access to basic savings or pensions, or paid leave from work.

Clearly, everybody recognises the shock (from Covid). The choice is being said to be between lives and livelihood­s. This is not a choice the govt of India is making.

JUNAID AHMAD, India director, WB

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