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. |

