The Prime
Minister held a meeting of the National Committee on DBT to review the rollout of
the Direct Benefits Transfer (DBT) system so far. The meeting was attended by
all concerned Ministers including the Finance Minister, Deputy Chairman Planning
Commission and Chairman, UIDAI. Secretaries of all Departments were also
present.
Major decisions taken:
After reviewing the progress in
rollout of DBT in Phase - I, many important decisions were taken to expand the coverage
of areas under DBT in Phase II of the rollout. These are:
1.
DBT
will now be expanded to NPR states
where biometrics are being collected under the
National Population Register. These include Odisha,
West Bengal, UP, Uttarakhand, Bihar and Chhattisgarh. The
collection biometrics in selected districts here will be accelerated to have a coverage of 70-80% by June 2013 and DBT will be rolled out from 1.7.2013.
2. Additional districts: The next phase of the rollout will
begin from 1 July 2013. A total of 78
districts have been identified for
this phase based on the lists given by UIDAI and Registrar General of India.
The list is annexed.
a.
States Not covered in Phase I which are now
covered:
i. UP - 6 districts
ii. Bihar - 3 districts
iii. West Bengal - 2 districts
iv. Odisha - 4 districts
v. Gujarat - 4 districts
vi. Himachal Pradesh - 6 districts
vii. Tamil Nadu - 3 districts
b. States covered in Phase I with more districts now - Kerala, Punjab, Delhi, MP, Rajasthan, AP, Maharashtra, Jharkhand.
3. Additional schemes: DBT now covers 26 schemes. The three
Pension Schemes managed by MoRD (old age,
disability and widows) will now be
covered under DBT in all the covered districts. DBT for pension schemes would be introduced from 1.7.2013 along with
the rollout of Phase-II.
4. Expanding to Post Offices: DBT will be expanded to include
Post Offices and schemes run through Post Office accounts from 1 October 2013.
By this time, the Post Offices will have the core banking system in 51
districts. They will accelerate CBS in other districts as well.
5. LPG Subsidy through DBT: MoPNG is working on rolling out DBT of LPG subsidy in a
phased manner. There will be a phased
rollout beginning with one district and expanding to 20 districts by 15 May
2013. Rollout will cover more districts as Aadhaar
enrolment expands. The total number of LPG consumers in the country is 14 crores and as the scheme rolls out, the subsidy amount will
be transferred to consumers directly into their bank accounts. With the subsidy
going directly, there will be only one price at which cylinders will be sold at
a dealer`s shop. This will eliminate all ghost connections and diversion of
cylinders.
1. Nationwide Database digitisation: Departments will start the process of digitisation
in all districts, irrespective of the rollout of DBT as this is a critical activity which need not wait
and can be done in parallel.
2.
Mission Directorate: A full
fledged DBT Mission Directorate consisting of a Mission Director assisted by
other officers is being created to have an institutionalized administrative
arrangement to enable smooth rollout, early identification of bottlenecks,
resolution of bottlenecks and handholding of Ministries/ departments wherever
necessary. To facilitate a nationwide rollout of DBT, the Prime Minister has approved the creation of a post of Mission
Director for DBT.
Prime Minister`s Closing Remarks
In his closing remarks, the PM said that the meeting was productive and everyone`s views were heard.
This program will transform the way in which government benefits are
delivered to our people. He said that we have come some distance since DBT was
rolled out in January. In these 3 months, we
have learnt a lot about the challenges in implementing a program of this sort.
It has not been as easy as departments envisaged. We have run into many
operational issues which were resolved along the way. I am heartened by the
progress and am hopeful about the future. But
the journey has just begun and we have a long distance to go. This is not the
time to rest.
He said that DBT is not conceptually difficult. It consists of just a few simple steps. In the field, it is all about digitising data,
enrolling in Aadhaar, opening bank accounts and
seeding these accounts. More importantly, he said that DBT requires process re-engineering at the
government level. He emphasised the need
to change the way we transact business, the way we release funds, the way
we track funds and the information we have on beneficiaries. All these are
important in themselves. He urged everyone to apply themselves to this exercise
as that is one of the biggest benefits that will come out of DBT.
He mentioned that the exercise of DBT has revealed the poor nature of tracking and monitoring systems we have
in departments. If we need to ensure that the money we spend delivers outcomes,
it is necessary that we have a robust monitoring system in place. That is what
DBT does, in addition to making the process simpler for beneficiaries and
rooting out fraud, corruption and wastage.
He
concluded by saying that as DBT expands, DBT
will become more visible with a larger footprint, both in terms of area and
in terms of number of people covered. This is a program on which the
implementation capacity of the government will be tested. We will soon be
covering over 120 districts and even more in a few more months. We cannot
afford to fail. We need to show that we can deliver results and benefits. He asked all
Ministries and Departments to apply themselves with dedication to this major
initiative and the challenging task in rolling out the DBT program.
Districts in phase I and phase II
SC/SKS
(Release ID :94513) |
Monday, April 8, 2013
Prime Minister approves expansion of Direct Benefits Transfers (DBT) 78 more districts, 3 more Pension Schemes under DBT DBT will now cover 1/5th of the country
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