Hindustan Times (East UP)

‘Transactio­ns under one ration card scheme up, signals return of migrants’

- Abhishek Dey abhishek.dey@hindustant­imes.com

THESE ARE OVER AND ABOVE THE 1.78 MILLION RATION CARDHOLDER­S AND 7.2 MILLION BENEFICIAR­IES

NEW DELHI: Transactio­ns recorded under the ‘one nation one ration card’ (ONORC) scheme — notified in July — have been going up consistent­ly every month, indicating that migrant workers, who left the capital in the wake of the second wave of Covid-19 earlier this year, are returning, said senior Delhi government officials.

Goods and services tax (GST) and value-added tax (VAT) collection­s are also up since July, suggesting that economic activities have gone up with a phased scaling down of lockdown restrictio­ns.

“Other than schools, prohibitio­n on large gatherings, and maximum cap on guests in certain industries such as restaurant­s, bars, banquet halls, etc, are over. More migrant workers are now returning to the city each month,” said a senior official in the Delhi government on condition of anonymity. The ONORC scheme allows people to avail of subsidised food grains under the National Food Security Act from fair price shops in towns they live irrespecti­ve of where their ration cards are registered. Government records show that when the scheme was rolled out in July, there were 29,569 transactio­ns at the 2,000-odd fair price shops in the city. This went up to 38,173 in August and 85,327 in September. This month, transactio­ns have already crossed 46,000. Officials in the government’s food and civil supplies department said, over the next one week, it may exceed the 100,000-mark for the first time.

The number of ration cardholder­s from other states who reside in Delhi is estimated by the government as 200,000, which translates to around 1 million beneficiar­ies (assuming each cardholder feeds four other mouths).

These are over and above the 1.78 million ration cardholder­s and 7.2 million beneficiar­ies registered in the national capital. Going by Census 2011 data, around 40% of the 7.2 million are also believed to be migrants from other states who have settled in Delhi over time and got ration cards registered here.“Trade, commerce and industrial activities have picked up and it reflects in the GST and VAT collection­s in the first two quarters. That usually leads to higher labour demand,” said the first senior official cited above.

Government records showed that GST collection­s in Delhi witnessed a decrease from ₹2,325.64 crore recorded in April to ₹991.05 crore in May and further down to ₹968.4 crore in June. But they went up to ₹1,584.75 crore in July, further up to ₹1,713.96 crore in August and ₹1,976.82 crore in September.

VAT collection­s, too, reflect a similar trend. They went down from ₹417.01 crore in April to ₹358.17 crore in May and further down to ₹207.35 crore in June. But they started to go up after that— ₹440.03 crore in July, ₹557.7 crore in August and₹565.92 crore in September, records showed.

“We learnt that the government was scaling down restrictio­ns and economic activities. But we did not have the confidence to return till September. Now it seems safe. I have a job in a factory. Thanks to the ration card scheme, we can avail subsidised food grain in Delhi,” said Rajesh Prajapati, a migrant from Bihar.

Rakesh Kumar, a migrant from eastern Uttar Pradesh said, “Big cities like Delhi lack safety nets for poor people like us. The ration scheme comes as a major relief because our jobs are not very secure.”

While the government had started with a phased relaxation process of the lockdown since June, HT had then published a series of articles on how migrant workers chose to stay put for a while for reasons ranging from Covid-19 cases in their own families, medical costs draining savings, lack of security net and job assurance in the city, and fears of a potential third wave of the pandemic.

“These concerns have clearly reduced now. By Diwali, industries are expected to operate at 90% capacity and above. Labour demand is increasing. So, a lot of migrant workers are coming back to the city,” said Neeraj Sehgal, general secretary of the welfare body at Delhi’s most prominent industrial area in Mayapuri.

Government reports said that more than 807,000 migrant workers left Delhi in buses they boarded from the interstate bus terminals in the first four weeks of the complete lockdown starting April 19 this year, that came after a record surge in Covid-19 infections.

The actual number is likely to be higher because the city government did not maintain records of migrant workers who left the city in trains and other means in the same period.

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