*The task of making the PDS work *
Jean Dreze
http://www.hindu.com/2010/07/08/stories/2010070854731000.htm

* The planned National Food Security Act represents a unique opportunity to
achieve gains with respect to the public distribution system. However, the
current draft is a non-starter. *

When I first visited Surguja district in Chhattisgarh nearly 10 years ago,
it was one of those areas where the Public Distribution System (PDS) was
virtually non-functional. I felt constrained to write, at that time, that
“the whole system looks like it has been designed to fail.” Ration shops
were in the hands of corrupt private dealers, who made money by selling PDS
grain in the open market. People were powerless to argue when a dealer told
them that, for no fault of his, the stocks were bare. Hunger haunted the
land.

Ten years later, there has been a remarkable turnaround on the PDS front.
One hesitates to give good marks to the Government of Chhattisgarh these
days, given its monstrous actions in other domains – the sell-out to mining
companies, backing of Salwa Judum, and suppression of human rights, to
mention a few. Still, the revival of the PDS in Chhattisgarh is a major
achievement, of interest to the whole country.

I had an enlightening view of this revival in Surguja a few weeks ago.
Today, almost every household in this area is entitled to 35 kg of grain
each month, at Re. 1 or Rs. 2 a kg (depending on the type of ration card).
What is more, the system is working – everywhere we went, we found that
people were getting 35 kg of grain on time, every month. For people who live
on the margins of subsistence, this is a dream.

The planned National Food Security Act represents a unique opportunity to
achieve similar gains across the country. However, the current draft,
prepared by an Empowered Group of Ministers, is a non-starter in this
respect. Indeed, the food guarantee is restricted to 25 kg of grain (at an
unspecified price) for BPL households. This is less than their existing
entitlements. In response to recent agitations, the government seems willing
to raise the poverty line by a few notches, so that more households are
included. Even then, a targeted PDS is not the way to guarantee the right to
food.

The main problem with targeting is that it is both unreliable and divisive.
The first point is evident from many investigations into the distribution of
BPL cards. The “exclusion errors” are enormous. For instance, among all
rural households falling below the “poverty line” according to National
Sample Survey data, almost half did not have a BPL card in 2004-05. Similar
findings emerge from National Family Health Survey data.

Perhaps exclusion errors can be reduced with better BPL identification
methods. The N.C. Saxena Committee has made valuable suggestions in this
respect. But the fact remains that there is no reliable way to identify poor
households based on proxy indicators – it is bound to be a hit-or-miss
exercise. A landless household, for instance, may or may not be poor, and
similarly with a Scheduled Caste or female-headed household. The fact that a
household may be well-off today, but poor tomorrow (due, say, to illness,
displacement or unemployment) does not help matters. Last but not least, the
power equations in the rural areas are such that any BPL survey is liable to
be manipulated. There is no reason to expect the next BPL survey to be more
reliable than the last one.

Targeting is also divisive: it prevents the emergence of a cohesive public
demand for a functional PDS. And vocal demand is very important for the
success of the PDS. This is one reason why the PDS works much better in
Tamil Nadu than elsewhere: everyone has a stake in it. Chhattisgarh's recent
success builds on the same principle – about 80 per cent of the rural
population is covered.

In short, targeting is an ugly business, and it would be particularly
dangerous to “freeze” the BPL-APL distinction into law. That will amount to
converting a purely statistical benchmark, the “poverty line,” into a
permanent social division. Surely, the purpose of the Food Security Act is
not to manufacture class conflict?

For all these reasons, serious consideration must be given to the obvious
alternative – a universal Public Distribution System, at least in the rural
areas and urban slums. Consider the potential benefits first: every family
will have food assured in the house, month after month. Gone will be the
days of cold hearths and empty stomachs. For those at risk of hunger, the
PDS will be a lifeline. For others, it will be a form of income support and
social security – valuable things to have, even when you are not hungry. The
case for universalisation builds on this “dual purpose” of the PDS – food
security and income support.

The nutrition impact of the PDS, one may argue, is likely to be limited even
in the “universal” version. This may well be true. One reason is that the
PDS may not do much for young children – the crucial age group as far as
nutrition is concerned. What most children need is not more foodgrains but
more nutritious food (including animal protein), better breastfeeding
practices, health care and related support. They need to be fatter at birth,
which requires further interventions (important in their own right) related
to women's health and maternal entitlements. Special programmes are needed
for marginalised groups such as the urban homeless. Thus, a universal PDS is
only one part of an effective system of food and nutrition security.

This is not likely to come cheap. Tentative calculations suggest that a
comprehensive Food Security Act may cost something like one lakh crore
rupees a year. This may sound like a mind-boggling price tag, but it is not.
For one thing, in a country where half the children are undernourished,
there is no quick fix — any serious attempt to deal with mass
undernourishment is bound to be expensive. For another, one lakh crore
rupees is just about 1.5 per cent of India's Gross Domestic Product. Is that
an excessive price to pay to protect everyone from hunger?

Incidentally, India already spends more than that sum on things that are
rather trivial compared with the right to food. I am not just thinking of
military expenditure, which could do with some pruning, especially when it
is being used also for internal repression. The fertilizer subsidy is in the
range of one lakh crore rupees a year, with doubtful social benefits, not to
speak of the environmental damage. And the annual “revenue foregone” on
account of tax exemptions is more than five lakh crore rupees, according to
the Finance Minister's own “Foregone Revenue Statement.” This includes about
Rs. 80,000 crore of corporate income tax foregone (some of it “on account of
contributions to political parties”) and nearly Rs. 40,000 crore of foregone
customs duties on “vegetables, fruits, cereals and edible oils.”

The “food subsidy” itself is already around Rs. 70,000 crore. The problem is
not so much that this subsidy level is too low, but that it is badly used. A
telling symptom of this today is the mindless accumulation of nearly 60
million tonnes of grain in government warehouses. Instead of whining about
food inflation, and blaming “hoarders” for it, the government would do well
to release some of the gigantic food stocks.

This is not to dismiss the resource constraints. One way ahead will be to
introduce universal PDS, say, in the poorest 200 districts, and extend it
gradually to the whole country – much as in the case of the National Rural
Employment Guarantee Act. Today's excess stocks will be of great help in the
initial phase of this transition. Five years from now, the cost of a
comprehensive food security system will be closer to 1 per cent than 1.5 per
cent of GDP, if the current rates of growth continue. Meanwhile there will
be enough time to enhance food procurement and mobilise extra funds. The
roadmap is clear: promote local procurement and tax the rich.

None of this, of course, will be of much use unless the PDS can be made to
work. Universalisation itself will help in that respect, as argued earlier.
But systemic reforms of the PDS are required, building on the wealth of
insights that have been gained from recent initiatives to restore
transparency and accountability in various domains. If Chhattisgarh can turn
the PDS around, why not other States?

The National Food Security Act is not going to eliminate malnutrition in one
go. But it could be the end of hunger, and the beginning of a new movement
for the realisation of everyone's right to good nutrition. Let all this be
clear before the idea is dismissed as unaffordable.
* (The author is Honorary Professor at the Delhi School of Economics.) *
*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
 It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*

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