Cash Transfer: Hype or Reality
Cash Transfer: Hype or Reality
By
Dr Arvind Kumar
The
UPA-II government has proposed to roll out the direct cash transfer (DCT)
scheme meant for providing subsidy and other welfare schemes to the desired
beneficiaries by transferring money to their Aadhaar-enabled bank accounts from
1 January 2013. The DCT scheme has been introduced to prevent leakages and
corruption in implementation of social welfare related schemes. Congress
president Sonia Gandhi has hailed it as a ‘revolutionary’ measure and the UPA
finance minister has welcomed it as ‘pure magic.’ However, the claims of the
government have been already been questioned both by people who never got the
promised cash and, activists who point out to the high risks involved in such a
fundamental shift.
Some
state leaders have voiced their concerns about the scheme. West Bengal Chief
Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday strongly opposed the Centre’s cash transfer
scheme, saying the poor will not get the money as there is no mechanism to
implement it. In a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Chhattisgarh Chief
Minister Raman Singh has said financial inclusion and availability of information
technology infrastructure are preconditions to cash transfer and there are
substantial problems in the state on both accounts. "It would also be
difficult to fix the monthly cash subsidies in view of fluctuation in market
prices." According to one social
activist, “ bio-metrics is both changing and undependable; banking correspondent
system will be the new cause of corruption and it is only about reducing cost
to the State, people be damned'. No doubt, the Centre has embarked on an
ambitious journey; nevertheless, the danger lies in setting unrealistic
deadlines driven by expediency and tarnishing an important reform in the
process.
#cash #Transfer #Hype #Reality #RamanSingh #ChiefMinister #Reform
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