The Union Cabinet on Tuesday
cleared the National Food Security Bill that gives legal entitlement to
67 per cent population (including 75 per cent rural and 50 per cent
urban) for subsidised grains under the Targeted Public Distribution
System
The Union Cabinet on Tuesday cleared the National Food
Security Bill that gives legal entitlement to 67 per cent population
(including 75 per cent rural and 50 per cent urban) for subsidised
grains under the Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS).
A
beneficiary will be entitled to 5 kg of rice, wheat or coarse cereals at
Rs. 3, 2 and Re. 1 a kg a month and will be identified by the States
based on parameters prescribed by the Union government.
The
Cabinet gave its nod to the 71 amendments proposed by the Food Ministry,
including the one that said the 2.43 crore Antyodaya Anna Yojna
beneficiary households will continue to get their quota of 35 kg grains a
month under the TPDS.
In its revised form, the Bill favours the
“two-child norm” by denying maternal benefits to a pregnant woman beyond
two live births. The Law Ministry quoted Supreme Court judgments and
the National Population Policy of 2000 to justify the provision. The
Communist Party of India (Marxist) had opposed the clause in the
Standing Committee meeting and had given a dissent note on it.
The
subsidised prices of grains may be revised after three years to the
level of the minimum support price paid for procurement of grains, the
Bill said.
Hyped as a flagship programme of the United
Progressive Alliance government, law will be implemented in phases. “It
will be implemented as and when the States get ready,” a Minister told
The Hindu as he came out of the Cabinet meeting.
“We will try to
bring the amendments to the Food Bill in Parliament before Friday,” Food
Minister K.V. Thomas told journalists after the Cabinet meeting.
While
the existing allocation of grains to the States shall be protected, the
cost of transporting grains to ration shops shall not be passed on to
consumers as was proposed earlier.
The additional burden on the
food subsidy is estimated at about Rs. 23,000 crore at 2012-13 prices.
The grain requirement is estimated at 61.23 million tonnes.
The
Right to Food Campaign, a conglomeration of civil society groups that
began its sit-in here seeking a universal food security law, flayed the
revised bill as “unacceptable” as it has “diluted provision for
community kitchens, destitute, vulnerable and the infirm and does not
provide workable redress mechanisms.”