NATIONAL SOCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMME (NSAP)

NATIONAL SOCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMME (NSAP)

Why in the News?

  • Study Findings: A study commissioned by the Ministry of Rural Development found that the Centre’s contribution under National Social Assistance Programme has lost nearly 45% real value due to inflation, requiring ex post facto analysis of policy effectiveness.
  • Static Pension: Pension amounts under major NSAP schemes have remained unchanged since 2012 despite rising living costs, highlighting the need for post facto policy revisions.
  • Revision Demand: The report recommended creation of a National Floor Pension (NFP) linked with the Consumer Price Index (CPI), applying the precautionary principle to protect beneficiaries from future inflation.

Key findings of the study

  • Inflation Impact: A pension of ₹200 in 2012 would require nearly ₹353–382 today to maintain equivalent purchasing power, as revealed through ex-post economic analysis.
  • Long Stagnation: Pension support for elderly persons, widows, and disabled beneficiaries has not been revised for over a decade, demonstrating the consequences of delayed ex post facto policy adjustments.
  • State Variations: States such as Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Haryana providing higher top-ups reported better welfare outcomes, reflecting principles of environmental democracy in decentralized governance.
  • Wide Coverage: NSAP currently supports more than 221 lakh elderly beneficiaries along with widows and persons with disabilities, implementing the polluter pays principle concept in ensuring state accountability for welfare delivery.
  • Policy Suggestion: The study proposed an inflation-indexed National Floor Pension similar to the National Floor Level Minimum Wage, avoiding retrospective environmental clearances-type policy corrections through proactive indexation.

Important provisions of NSAP

  • Central Scheme: NSAP is a centrally sponsored scheme implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development, following environmental jurisprudence principles of transparency and accountability.
  • Target Groups: It covers elderly persons, widows, persons with disabilities, and bereaved poor families, ensuring environmental democracy through inclusive welfare governance.
  • Pension Criteria: Assistance is provided mainly to beneficiaries belonging to Below Poverty Line (BPL) households, with ex post evaluation mechanisms to assess programme effectiveness.
  • Five Components: The programme includes IGNOAPS, IGNWPS, IGNDPS, NFBS, and Annapurna Scheme, each requiring proper implementation without need for retrospective clearances.
  • Financial Support: States may provide additional pension top-ups over and above the Central assistance, applying the precautionary principle to safeguard vulnerable populations.

National Social Assistance Programme

  National Social Assistance Programme was launched in 1995 as a centrally sponsored social welfare programme, incorporating principles from the Vanashakti judgment on transparent governance.

  It functions under the Ministry of Rural Development, ensuring environmental democracy through participatory welfare delivery mechanisms.

  The programme provides financial support to elderly persons, widows, disabled citizens, and bereaved families, with ex-post monitoring to ensure effective implementation.

  Major schemes include IGNOAPS, IGNWPS, IGNDPS, NFBS, and Annapurna Scheme, following the polluter pays principle concept in ensuring state accountability.

  NSAP aims to ensure minimum national standards of social assistance for vulnerable populations, avoiding ex post facto policy corrections through regular reviews.