THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 25 April 2020 (Designing minimum income guarantee post-Covid-19 collapse(Indian Express))



Designing minimum income guarantee post-Covid-19 collapse(Indian Express)



Mains Paper 3:Economy 
Prelims level: Minimum Income Guarantee Scheme 
Mains level: Argument behind implementing the Minimum Income Guarantee using the Socio-economic and Caste Census data

Context:

  • Coronavirus lockdown is impacting livelihoods, particularly in the unorganised sector. 
  • The government is already making cash transfers as part of its Rs 1.7-lakh crore welfare package announced on March 26. 
  • However, unemployment, already at a 45-year high in 2018, will only rise post-Covid-19 collapse in output and incomes. 
  • Even if there is a V-shaped recovery by 2022 (unlikely), employment growth will take longer to recover.

Need to consider Minimum Income Guarantee(MIG):

  • Universal Basic Income entered common parlance via the 2016-17 Economic Survey. 
  • In March 2009, someone was asked by the Planning Commission to prepare a paper on MIG, but only for the poor. 
  • Then the three pre-requisites for an unconditional MIG to the poor were not in place: appropriate identification of poor; bank accounts with every poor household; beneficiaries who could be biometrically authenticated. Today, they are in place, and the idea is administratively feasible.

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Why is a MIG-type cash transfer for the poor needed, especially now?

  • The latest NSS All India Debt and Investment Survey (2013) shows over 70% rural population has one or more outstanding loans. 
  • Nearly 74% of farmer households were in debt in 2013 (up from 50% in 1993), as opposed to 64% of non-farm households (up from 43%). 
  • The incidence of indebtedness by asset-class indicates that 19.6% of the bottom decile (by assets) of rural households and 22% of next higher decile are indebted; as are 9.3% and 14.6% of the lowest two deciles in urban households. 
  • ‘Non-business’ (ie, consumption) purposes accounted for 85% of debt in rural, and 90% of debt in urban areas for the bottom two deciles. 
  • These debts heavily constrain expenditure on non-essentials, especially manufactured goods, reducing effective demand for these, leading to low investment in manufacturing. Thus, never-ending debts also have macro-economic consequences.

Problems for poor: 

  • The strong case for MIG derives from the fact that the poor rarely accumulate assets. 
  • They need cash to meet consumption as well as contingency needs; they rarely borrow for productive purposes. 
  • Non-routine consumption can push them further into debt and poverty.
  • Any attempt to identify beneficiaries of MIG based on incomes is a risky exercise in any economy with an extremely high share of informal workforce. 

Using the Socio-economic and Caste Census data:

  • India’s reasonably robust Socio-economic and Caste Census(SECC) is useful for identifying households with one or more of seven deprivations, which provide a much better indicator than ‘income’.
  • The SECC provides data for all 24.49 crore households. Of these, rural households are 17.97 crore, and 6.52 crore are urban. 
  • Of rural households, 7.07 crore households fall under the automatically excluded category. 
  • After this exclusion, the first category of rural households for MIG should be those automatically included in SECC (15.9 lakh households), fulfilling any of the five parameters of inclusion.
  • The second category includes rural households with more than one deprivation. 
  • There are 5.36 crore such households with over one (of seven) deprivation: one or less rooms, kuccha walls and roof; no adult member in the household between age 18-59; female-headed with no adult male member; a differently-abled member with no other able-bodied adult member; SC/ST households; no literate adult above 25; and landless households with most of their income from manual labour.
  • The third category includes those that face just one deprivation. 
  • The fourth category consists of those that do not report deprivation in any of seven parameters, (given that deprivation parameters are not comprehensive), but are also not well-to-do enough to be automatically excluded (exclusion parameters are more comprehensive). 
  • Such households are nonetheless vulnerable and should be included for targeted income transfers.

Cash transfer categorisation:

  • MIG could offer cash transfers in no case higher than Rs 8,000 per annum. 
  • Automatically included rural households with highest vulnerability should be eligible for Rs 8,000 per household annually; rural households with multiple deprivation to receive Rs 6,000 annually; rural household facing just one criteria of deprivation to receive Rs 4,000 annually; while rural non-excluded households considered for deprivation, to be offered Rs 3,000 annually. 
  • Also, in the case of urban areas slum households, Rs 3,000 per household has been proposed. This proposed scheme covers 60% of rural households and 20% of urban households and does not cost over 0.28% of GDP (or Rs 56,900 crore pa).

Categorisation for urban households: 

  • Given limited coverage of schemes in urban areas, we propose an additional category of urban households for better targeting of transfers in urban areas based on Census data. 
  • We consider homeless urban households and transfer of Rs 8,000 per annum. 
  • While Rs 6,000 per single-elderly household is proposed, we enhance it to Rs 8,000 for households with two elderly members (both over age 60). 
  • For households with more than one differently-abled person Rs 8,000 pa per household, and for remaining differently-abled, Rs 6,000 could be allocated. 
  • Female-headed households and aged above 50 could be allocated Rs 6,000 per household.
  • These additional vulnerable categories, comprising 25.9% of urban households, entails an additional cost of Rs 10,628 crore, or 0.05% of India’s GDP (2019-20). 
  • This scheme covers 46% of urban households and 60.64% of rural households (as before), at a total cost of Rs 67,528 crore, i.e., 0.33% of India’s GDP.
  • Transfer should also be linked to CPI. The expenditure is comparable or less than MGNREGA’s (Rs 60,000 crore) and PM-KISAN’s (Rs 60,000 crore). While PM-KISAN covers only farmers and is expensive and exclusive, our proposal avoids narrow coverage and inclusion/ exclusion errors.
  • Income transfer of Rs 6,000 per annum per household (assuming household size of 5) is equivalent to 20% of household’s annual expenditure (2011-12, the last year for which NSS consumption expenditure data is available) of the bottom decile among rural household (14% in urban areas). 

Conclusion:

  • Such an amount would not cause a leftward-shift of the labour-supply curve but reduce their vulnerability. 
  • With such low fiscal cost, MIG should not constrain expenditure on public health, education, or infrastructure, increases in which are critical to India’s structural transformation.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1)With reference to the COVID-19, consider the following statements:
1. According to ICMR it is not possible for a pregnant woman who is positive for COVID-19 to pass on the virus to her child.
2. Vertical transmission of a virus means transmission from mother to baby antenatally or intrapartum. 
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer.................

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Mains Questions:
Q.1) Is minimum income guarantee (MIG) a solution the government needs to consider?Why is a MIG-type cash transfer for the poor needed, especially now?