Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

E-PDS could have eased migrant crisis, say experts

- Zia Haq

A DIGITISED, PORTABLE PDS WAS TO BE A BOON FOR THE BENEFICIAR­IES WHO LOSE OUT ON THEIR MONTHLY QUOTA OF SUBSIDISED FOOD

WHEN THEY MIGRATE

NEWDELHI:THE plight of thousands of workers fleeing cities, facing hunger and distress in the aftermath of the coronaviru­s lockdown, could have been eased by a federal programme launched last year to make subsidized rations portable for migrants. But the programme hasn’t gained the scale and reach to be a mitigating factor, analysts said.

A digitized, portable public distributi­on system (PDS) was to be a boon for beneficiar­ies of the National Food Security Act who lose out on their monthly quota of subsidised food when they migrate. The programme, known as “one nation, one ration card”, still remains a work in progress.

The scheme is still not fully geared for seamless inter-state transactio­ns. Inter-state portabilit­y, whereby a migrant draws subsidised food in a state other than his own, is being tried on select “clusters” of 12 “contiguous” states. This means the system is capable of serving only migrants who move to a bordering state in those chosen clusters.

“There is the issue that many migrants are single men who might have their ration cards with their families back in the village. With this kind of portabilit­y, they would not get rations,” said Dipa Sinha, a professor with Ambedkar University.

The government needed a far more high-tech system where every member of a migrant family had individual electronic ration cards, since the ration quota under the National Food Security Act is designed on a per capita basis. Under the law, the poor receive 5kg of foodgrain per person per month at a subsidized rate of ~2-3 per kg, which has been now increased to 7kg due to the pandemic.

“The government is on course to make portabilit­y fully operationa­l countrywid­e by June, 2020,” an official of the consumer affairs ministry said, asking not to be named. Given the pandemic, it might face some delay, he said.

Experts say the programme’s design doesn’t account for the scale of internal migration. The Economic Survey 2016-17 used some new metrics to give updated data on migration. It suggested an annual inter-state migration flow of close to 9 million from 2011 to 2016 in a “circular” fashion based on data from railways.

The first portabilit­y trials were done by September 2018 in clusters in six states. By January 2020, 12 states — Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Gujarat, Maharasthr­a, Haryana, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Goa, Jharkhand and Tripura – were in.

The system essentiall­y allowed for “state-level portabilit­y”, meaning ration-card holders could draw rations from electronic­ally linked fair price shops within their “district or state”.

A novel cohort-based migration metric, a statistica­l tool developed by former chief economic adviser Arvind Subramania­n, revealed an annual “interstate migrant population of about 60 million and an inter-district migration as high as 80 million” between 2001 and 2011. Subramania­n had called for full portabilit­y of all welfare doles.

“The government’s initiative to start portabilit­y of ration cards is a right step, but it requires scale,” said Asit Upadhyay of the Right to Food Campaign.

According to Chinmay Tumbe, the author of “India Moving - A

History of Migration” and faculty at IIM (Ahmedabad), India’s migration is circular in the sense that people keep moving from city to city until they return home before moving out again.

This means a portable food distributi­on system has to be capable of continuall­y tracking migrant workers, who make up 29% of the nation’s workforce.

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