Fewer urban poor could get benefits
DEBROY PANEL Number of those eligible for ‘automatic inclusion’ may come down drastically if govt accepts report
NEWDELHI: Urban households eligible for “automatic inclusion” in government-funded welfare schemes will come down from 18.1 million to 7.2 million if the government accepts a refined methodology recommended by an expert panel.
In terms of percentage, the number could decrease from 27.8% to 11.1%. There are 65.1 million urban households in India.
The committee, headed by NITI Aayog member and economist Bibek Debroy, was set up in January by the Union housing and urban affairs ministry. The panel’s goal is to fine-tune the method recommended in 2011 by another panel, led by SR Hashim, to identify poor families in towns and cities.
The panel pegged the overall number of urban households entitled to at least one government benefit, even if they don’t qualify under the “automatic inclusion” category, at 30.9%.
The previous figure calculated through the Hashim committee’s method was 35%. In rural areas, nearly half of the 180 million homes fall in this category.
“We are going through the
Homeless, one-room house, no income, disabled
Remaining households get scores from 0-12 based on various social criteria
Debroy panel’s report. No decision has been taken as yet,” said a senior ministry official.
Debroy was recently appointed chairman of the economic advisory council of the Prime Minister.