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One Nation One Ration Card - A Review

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November 27, 2020

Click here to know more on the ONORC system

Why in news?

  • The Union Finance Minister recently stated that the “One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC)” scheme now covers 68.8 crore beneficiaries under the PDS across 28 states and UTs.
  • In this context, here is a look at the performance of the ONORC nationally and with special reference to Odisha.

What is ONORC?

  • The central idea of the ONORC is to make the PDS completely portable.
  • It aims to allow beneficiaries to lift entitled ration from any part of the country.
  • The central government will deduct this ration from the quota of the home state and add it in the quota of the selling state.

What is the case with Odisha?

  • Odisha joined the ONORC system in June 2020.
  • But, there is no record of a transaction allowing an Odia migrant to lift her stock from another state, or any transaction at all under this scheme.
  • Aadhaar seeding - On September 15, 2019, the state government declared that only those beneficiaries whose Aadhaar was seeded with their ration card could lift their entitled foodgrain through ABBA
    • Aadhaar-based Biometric Authentication (ABBA)
  • Media reports suggest that more than 18 lakh beneficiaries lost their rights to withdraw foodgrain as their ration card was not seeded with Aadhaar.
  • It is not clear how many could get back into the system afterwards.
  • Beneficiaries have been deleted even if they had Aadhaar cards but these weren’t seeded with their ration cards.
  • Mandatory ABBA for withdrawing entitled ration had a detrimental impact on particular groups.
  • These include the elderly, the disabled, and the physically incapacitated people.
  • They find it difficult to physically visit PDS shops or whose fingerprints are not accurately read by authentication machines.

What is the picture at the national level?

  • Nationally, monthly transactions show close to 24,500 beneficiaries on nearly 3,500 cards who lifted their entitled ration from states other than their home state.
  • From June till November 15 of 2020, merely around 95,800 beneficiaries through around 12,850 ration cards have benefited.
  • Notably, this is a small fraction of the 22 crore PDS beneficiaries in India.
  • It is clear that despite tall claims, very few beneficiaries have actually benefited from the scheme.
  • Intrastate portability of ration transactions is much higher than interstate portability.
    • In October 2020, 1.45 core transactions took place through intrastate portability.
    • A majority of this was in Andhra Pradesh (42.5 lakh), Rajasthan (28.1 lakh), Bihar (22.6 lakh), U.P. (11.5 lakh) and Telangana (11 lakh).
  • Implementing ONORC within a state does not require any additional arrangements as it follows already operational procedures of entitlement and price.

What are the procedural shortfalls?

  • Despite the Centre’s claims about the implementation of the ONORC over the past year, there is no clarity on the operating procedures and beneficiary entitlements.
  • For instance, each state has a different price and basket of entitlements.
  • Various operating factors like fixing of prices, entitlements and payments, and sharing of migrant data between states remain unaddressed.
    • Would the rice-eating Odia get rice or wheat in a wheat-providing state like Rajasthan?
    • Would beneficiaries of Tamil Nadu, who get ration free of cost, have to pay for receiving the ration in another state?

What is the way forward?

  • It is essential that a detailed cost-benefit analysis of the ONORC is undertaken.
  • This is to address the concern around the exclusion of beneficiaries without any evidence, to indicate the trade-offs of portability.
  • The administrative burdens for beneficiaries should be addressed to make the system more accessible to them.

 

Source: The Indian Express

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