The Sunday Guardian

MODI READIES BASIC INCOME GAME CHANGER FOR 2019

- CONTINUED FROM P1

power recently, the new government­s have announced conditiona­l farm loan waivers. However, PM Modi and the top leadership of the BJP are averse to a farm loan waiver as this would benefit just one section while leaving many others disgruntle­d.

“The government is serious about the agrarian crisis, but at the same time it is also committed to bring the underprivi­leged out of poverty. Farm loan waiver may benefit a particular section, but a Universal Basic Income will cover a larger population, which is unable to meet its ends,” said a senior BJP leader.

While a pilot project of UBI was rolled out in 20 villages of Madhya Pradesh in 2013, the BJP recently promised UBI in its manifesto in Rajasthan Assembly elections. The BJP promised a fixed income of Rs 5,000 per month to the unemployed youths of Rajasthan.

Government sources said that in UBI, the Centre can give the states the freedom to identify the beneficiar­ies and hence this may encourage the states to partner with the Central government in launching the scheme. States like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, with a large number of unemployed youths and urban and rural poor have already expressed their willingnes­s to launch the scheme.

A government official explained that UBI would mean a massive shift in the way revenue received through taxation is spent. Currently, the money earned through taxation is used to fund various services that the government provides, as well as the welfare subsidies it pays for. But with UBI, the government will pay the money directly to beneficiar­ies who will have the freedom to spend the money according to their needs.

In Madhya Pradesh, the pilot project for UBI in collaborat­ion with UNICEF yielded positive results. In 20 villages, fixed sums of Rs 300 per adult and Rs 150 to minors were given. While it was found that the villages spent more on food and healthcare, the children’s school performanc­e improved in 68% of the families. The time spent in school, personal savings etc., also increased. The study also found an increase in economic activity as well as an increase in savings, an improvemen­t in housing and sanitation, improved nutrition, less food poverty, improved health and schooling, greater inclusion of the disabled in society and a lack of frivolous spending.

The Economic Survey of 2016-17 had favoured unconditio­nal cash transfers to the poor, given the inefficien­cies in the plethora of welfare schemes of the Union and state government­s and their failure to lift people out of poverty. The survey had suggested replacing some of the ongoing government­funded welfare schemes with Universal Basic Income (UBI), rather than running them in a parallel manner.

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