With a single stroke, the government has made over 3.5
crore existing post office accounts ready for its new Aadhaar-linked
cash transfer scheme.
The accounts, which belong to
MGNREGA workers over the country, were originally to be used only for
receiving wages under the rural employment guarantee scheme. However,
the government has now woken up to the potential of using the ready-made
network of accounts to directly transfer benefits such as pensions,
scholarships and social welfare payments.
Last month,
Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh wrote to Finance Minister P.
Chidambaram bemoaning the fact that due to an August 2008 notification,
“No deposit other than NREGA wage can be made in these accounts.”
In
his letter to the Finance Minister, Mr. Ramesh said: “This, you will
agree, defeats the very purpose of the direct benefits transfer
initiative launched by our government recently and described by you as a
‘gamechanger’.”
The Finance Ministry promptly
responded by amending its notification to allow MGNREGA beneficiaries to
now receive other “government benefits and deposits” in their post
office savings accounts. The Department of Posts has also been notified
about the changes.
Under the new cash or direct
benefit transfer initiative, the Aadhaar number will be used to
authenticate the identities of beneficiaries, who will then receive
their government benefits directly into their accounts. This requires
all beneficiaries to open bank or post office accounts, which will then
have to be seeded with their Aadhaar numbers.
With
MGNREGA already launching its own initiative to link its payments with
Aadhaar, it would speed up the process and prevent duplication of work
to allow the existing accounts to be used for the cash transfer scheme
as well.
Of the 8.26 crore MGNREGA accounts in the
country, 43 per cent — or 3.5 crore — are post office accounts, while
the remainder are bank accounts. States like Bihar, Jharkhand, Gujarat
and Maharashtra have an especially high percentage of MGNREGA workers
using post office accounts, and are likely to benefit from this move
once the cash transfer scheme comes into full swing.
CURTOSY : THE HINDU dated 20.01.2013.
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