$1 Billion from World Bank to Protect India’s Poorest from COVID-19
[PIB Press Release/15.05.2020]
The Government
of India and the World Bank today signed a $750 million of $1 billion proposed for
Accelerating India’s COVID-19 Social Protection Response Programme
to support India’s efforts at providing social assistance to the poor and vulnerable
households, severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
This takes
the total commitment from the Bank towards emergency COVID-19 response in India
to $2 billion. A $1
billion support was announced last month towards immediate support to India’s health
sector.
This new
support will be funded in two phases – an immediate allocation of $750 million for fiscal
year 2020 and a $250 million second tranche that will be made available for fiscal
year 2021.
The agreement
was signed by Shri Sameer Kumar Khare, Additional Secretary,
Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance on behalf of the Government
of India and Mr Junaid Ahmad,
Country Director, India on behalf of the World Bank.
Shri Khare said that a strong and portable social protection system
is critical to carry vulnerable households through the current and future crises.
This programme will expand the impact and coverage of
India’s social protection system by helping vulnerable groups access more social
benefits directly and across the country.
The first
phase of the operation will be implemented countrywide through the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY). It will immediately help scale-up cash transfers and food benefits, using a core
set of pre-existing
national platforms and programmes such as the Public Distribution System (PDS) and Direct
Benefit Transfers (DBT); provide robust social
protection for essential workers involved in COVID-19 relief efforts; and benefit
vulnerable groups, particularly migrants and informal workers, who face high risks
of exclusion under the PMGKY. In the second phase, the programme will deepen the social protection package, whereby
additional cash and in-kind benefits based on local needs will be extended through
state governments and portable social protection delivery systems.
Social protection
is a critical investment since half of India’s population earns less than $3 a day
and are precariously close to the poverty line. Over 90 per cent of India’s workforce
is employed in the informal sector, without access to significant savings or workplace
based social protection benefits such as paid sick leave or social insurance. Over
9 million migrants, who cross state borders to work each year, are also at greater
risk as social assistance programmes in India largely
provide benefits to residents within states, without adequate portability of benefits
across state boundaries. Importantly, in an urbanising
India cities and towns will need targeted support as India’s largest social protection
programmes are focused on rural populations.
Mr Junaid Ahmad said that
the response to the COVID-19 pandemic around the world has required governments
to introduce social distancing and lock downs in unprecedented ways. These measures,
intended to slow down the spread of the virus have, however, impacted economies
and jobs – especially in the informal sector. India with the world’s largest lockdown
has not been an exception to this trend. In this context, cash transfers and food
benefits will help the poor and vulnerable access a ‘safety bridge’ towards a time
when the economy will start to revive.
The programme will create a system that will strengthen the delivery
of India’s safety nets program. It will:
·
Help India
move from 460 plus fragmented social protection schemes to an integrated system
that is fast and more flexible, acknowledging the diversity of needs across states;
·
Enable geographic
portability of social protection benefits that can be accessed from anywhere
in the country, ensuring food, social insurance and cash-support for all, including
for migrants and the urban poor; and
·
Move India’s
social protection system from a predominantly rural focus to a pan national one
that recognizes the needs of the urban poor.
Mr Ahmad said that the COVID-19 pandemic has also put
the spotlight on some of the gaps in the existing social protection systems. This
programme will support the Government of India’s efforts
towards a more consolidated delivery platform – accessible to both rural and urban
populations across state boundaries. The platform draws on the country’s existing
architecture of safety nets – the PDS, the digital and banking infrastructure, and
Aadhaar – while positioning the overall social protection
system for the needs of a 21st century India. Importantly, such a system will need
to leverage India’s federalism enabling and supporting states to respond quickly
and effectively in their context.
Of the $1
billion commitment, an immediate
allocation of $750 million for fiscal year 2020 of which $550 million will be financed by
a credit from the International Development Association (IDA) – the World Bank’s
concessionary lending arm and $200 million will be a loan from the International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), with a final maturity of 18.5 years
including a grace period of five years. The remaining $250 million
will be made available after June 30, 2020 and would be on standard IBRD terms. The programme will be implemented by the Ministry of Finance, Government
of India.