Public Distribution System,
Buffer Stocks & Food Security
Sells at MSP
Procure & Store
At Central Issue Price
FPS Dealer
At Subsidised Rate
📦 Commodities Distributed
- Central allocation: Wheat, Rice, Sugar, Kerosene
- State additions: Pulses, edible oils, iodised salt, spices
- Millets (Nutri-cereals) added after millets push 2023
- Some states: dal, mustard oil, atta, chana
🎯 Key Objectives
- Ensure food security for BPL/vulnerable households
- Price stabilisation of essential commodities
- Provide nutritional support to weaker sections
- Maintain buffer stocks for emergencies
- Equitable distribution from surplus to deficit states
- Provide remunerative prices to farmers via MSP procurement
| Category | Eligibility | Allotment | Price (approx.) | Identification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAY (Antyodaya Anna Yojana) | Poorest of BPL; landless labourers, widows, disabled, etc. | 35 kg/household/month | ₹2/kg wheat, ₹3/kg rice | State govts. using NSS criteria |
| BPL | Household income ≤ ₹15,000/year (original criterion) | 35 kg/household/month (revised 2002) | 50% of economic cost of FCI | State govts. based on Central norms |
| APL | Above Poverty Line; residual category | 15–35 kg/household/month | 100% of economic cost of FCI | State-level determination |
⚠️ Targeting Errors
- Exclusion error: Deserving poor excluded (NSS 2007: 63% of poor not covered)
- Inclusion error: Non-poor hold ration cards ("ghost beneficiaries")
- Migrant workers, informal sector workers — difficult to get ration cards
- Income-based definition excludes many multi-dimensionally poor
📉 Leakages & Diversions
- ~28% leakage → ₹69,108 crore annual loss
- Grains diverted to open market through corruption
- Nearly 1/3 of grains lifted from FCI fail to reach FPS
- NSSO (2011-12): Leakage ~46.7% due to transportation losses
🏗️ Supply Chain Inefficiencies
- Storage imbalance: excess capacity in Punjab/Haryana; shortage in Rajasthan/Maharashtra
- Spoilage due to inadequate warehouse capacity
- Remote areas: delayed deliveries, periodic shortages
- Procurement states ≠ consuming states (logistics challenge)
💸 Rising Subsidy Burden
- Food subsidy: ₹21,200 Cr (2002-03) → ~₹2 Lakh Cr (2024-25)
- APL priced out → less off-take → excess FCI stocks → higher carrying cost
- Subsidy dues to FCI often accumulate
- AAY + BPL pricing creates huge gap with economic cost
🌾 Monocropping & Crop Diversity
- MSP-driven procurement focuses on wheat and rice
- Discourages millets, pulses, oilseeds cultivation
- Punjab/Haryana shifted to water-intensive paddy → groundwater crisis
- India imports ~56% of edible oil requirement
🏙️ Urban Bias
- Urban FPS: better infrastructure, oversight, regular stock
- Rural/tribal areas: irregular supply, weaker monitoring
- Late and irregular grain arrival at FPS
- Poor awareness among beneficiaries of exact delivery schedule
📋 Coverage & Entitlements
- Rural: up to 75% of population covered
- Urban: up to 50% of population covered
- Overall ~67% of India's population
- ~80.56 crore beneficiaries (2025)
- PHH: 5 kg/person/month
- AAY: 35 kg/household/month
- Prices: Rice ₹3/kg, Wheat ₹2/kg, Coarse grains ₹1/kg
⚖️ Key Legal Provisions
- Eldest woman (≥18 years) = Head of Family for ration card
- State govts. identify beneficiaries as per Central guidelines
- Food Security Allowance if grains not supplied
- Grievance Redressal Officers (GROs) at district level
- State Food Commissions for accountability
- Social audit mechanisms mandated
- Nutritional support for children, pregnant/lactating mothers
🔑 Key Features
- Interstate Portability: Access PDS from any FPS across India
- Intrastate Portability: Any FPS within the same state
- Aadhaar-based authentication via e-PoS devices
- Central repository (IM-PDS portal) connects all state databases
- Annavitran portal for real-time transaction data
- Family members can access entitlements in native place
🏆 Achievements (2023–24)
- All ~20.54 Cr. ration cards (covering ~80 Cr. beneficiaries) digitised in all States/UTs
- >99.8% Aadhaar seeding of ration cards (at least one member per household) — PIB 2024
- ~5.41 lakh of 5.43 lakh FPS (~99.6%) automated with e-PoS devices — PIB 2024
- Supply chain computerised in 31 States/UTs
- Toll-free helplines (1967/1800-series) operational in all States/UTs
- Implemented in all 36 States/UTs
🔗 Beyond Food Security: ONORC Data Linkages
- Data from ONORC used in e-Shram portal (unorganised worker database)
- Linked to Ayushman Bharat health coverage for migrant workers
- Integrated with PM-SVANidhi (street vendor microcredit) beneficiary identification
- Migration data helps States plan infrastructure and welfare delivery
- Central dashboard enables real-time monitoring of grain movement and off-take patterns
Aadhaar seeded with ration cards eliminates duplicate/ghost beneficiaries. Electronic Point of Sale (e-PoS) devices at FPS authenticate beneficiaries biometrically in real time. ~95% FPS now have e-PoS. Reduces inclusion errors and prevents impersonation.
States like Chhattisgarh and Tamil Nadu use GPS to monitor truck movement from state depots to FPS. Prevents route diversion, pilferage, and delays. Reduces leakage during transportation — the largest source of PDS diversion.
Complete digitisation of ration cards, FPS transactions, and supply chain. SMART-PDS (Scheme for Modernization and Reforms through Technology in PDS) creates a national dashboard for end-to-end monitoring from procurement to beneficiary. Enables data-driven policymaking and integration with other welfare schemes.
Beneficiaries receive SMS when grain is dispatched or arrives at FPS. State portals and toll-free helplines (1967/1800-series) for complaint registration. Social audits by SHGs and NGOs to monitor FPS functioning. Transparency portals with online grievance tracking.
💰 Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) / Cash Transfers
Shanta Kumar Committee (2015) recommended gradual cash transfers starting with cities >1 million population. DBT in name of women, routed via PM Jan Dhan Yojana + Aadhaar (JAM Trinity). Reduces administrative costs and leakages. Concern: Inflation erodes real value; food markets inadequate in remote areas; beneficiaries prefer grain.
🎟️ Food Coupons
Beneficiaries given coupons instead of subsidised grain. Can purchase from any grocery store; retailer redeems coupons at banks. Economic Survey suggests this reduces administrative costs and eliminates black marketing. Maintains consumer choice while removing procurement and diversion problems.
🌐 Universal Basic Income (UBI)
Fixed periodic cash transfer to all citizens unconditionally. Imparts agency to beneficiaries; saves administrative costs; eliminates targeting errors. Concerns: Fiscal sustainability; may be diverted to non-food needs; insufficient for food security without adequate quantum.
- No exclusion error
- Covers vulnerable people without documentation
- Ensures food security for all
- Automatic stabilisation during price rise
- Eliminates targeting administrative burden
- Huge fiscal burden on exchequer
- Massive inclusion error (non-poor benefit)
- Requires high food grain procurement
- Increases open market cereal prices
- North Africa study suggests inefficiency
📊 Buffer Stock Policy
- Introduced in the 4th Five Year Plan (1969–74)
- FCI maintains buffer on behalf of Government of India
- Buffer norms fixed by CCEA (chaired by PM) quarterly
- Revised buffer norms: January 2015
- Operational Stock = TPDS stocks + Other Welfare Schemes stocks + Food Security Reserves
- Strategic Reserve: 30 LMT wheat + 20 LMT rice (Food Grain Stocking Norms)
- Pulse buffer stock: 1.5 LMT (from 2015) via NAFED, SFAC, FCI
- Excess stock liquidated via export, OMSS, or additional state allocation
🏛️ Food Corporation of India (FCI)
- Statutory body set up in 1965 under Food Corporation Act 1964
- Three mandates: (1) Effective MSP price support to farmers; (2) Procure and supply grain to PDS; (3) Maintain strategic reserve for market stabilisation
- Procures from farmers at MSP; sells to states at Central Issue Price
- Responsible for interstate movement of food grains to state godowns
- Main agency supplying food grains to PDS
FCI has become a buyer of last resort — compelled to procure unlimited quantities at MSP. In 2016-17, government procured >30% of marketable wheat surplus. Stock of ~243 LMT rice and ~281 LMT wheat in August 2023 exceeded official norms. Leads to bursting storage capacity and grain damage.
Procurement price (meant to maintain buffer) has become the effective guaranteed price for whatever quantity farmers offer. Creates incentive for unlimited sale to government. In scarcity, farmers don't benefit from price rise (government restricts); in surplus, private markets can't absorb freely because government absorbs everything at MSP.
Buffer stock policy tries to simultaneously achieve: (1) remunerative prices for farmers via MSP; (2) affordable food for poor via PDS; (3) price stabilisation in markets. These objectives often conflict — wide gap between purchase price and issue price → massive food subsidy bill. FY 2021-22: food subsidy = ₹2.88 lakh crore.
Counter-cyclical procurement: government should buy in surplus, release in scarcity. But TPDS commitments force government to withhold stocks even in bad crop years. No proactive, predefined liquidation policy for excess stocks. Buffer carrying cost has more than doubled since 2001-02. >1,500 MT of grain wasted in FCI godowns annually.
Government procures >75% of marketable surplus in some states → very little grain left for open market → upward pressure on open market prices, reducing consumer benefits of PDS subsidy. Essential Commodities Act, APMC Acts, and state interference adversely affect Indian grain's international price competitiveness.
📈 Quantitative Dimension
- India achieved food self-sufficiency in 1970s via Green Revolution
- Food grain production: ~309.34 MT (2023-24)
- Per capita availability: 514 g/day (2022) — self-sufficient
- India is a net exporter of food grains
- However, distribution remains deeply unequal
🥗 Qualitative Dimension
- Undernourished: 224.3 million (2019-21) — down from 249.4 million (2004-06)
- Stunting (children <5 yrs): 34.7% (2019) — down from 47.8% (2012)
- Anaemia in women of reproductive age: 57% (2019-20)
- Obese adults: 70 million (2023) — up from 25.2 million (2012)
- Global Hunger Index 2023: India ranked 111th/125 (GHI 2024: 105th/127)
- GHI 2024: India trails Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh; ranks better than Pakistan and Afghanistan
👶 Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS)
One of the world's largest child intervention programmes. Provides 6 basic services to children ≤6 years and pregnant/lactating mothers through Anganwadi Centres.
- Supplementary nutrition: Child — 500 cal, 12–15g protein (300 days); Pregnant mother — 600 cal, 18–20g protein
- Immunisation, health checkups, referral services
- Health/nutrition education to adult women
- Non-formal pre-school education (3–6 years)
🍱 Mid-Day Meal (MDM) / PM-POSHAN Scheme
World's largest school feeding programme, reaching ~11 crore children. Aims to improve school enrolment, attendance, retention, and nutrition.
- Extended to upper primary (Class VI–VIII) from 2008-09
- Primary students: 300 cal, 8–12g protein per day
- Upper primary: 700 cal, 20g protein per day
- Renamed PM-POSHAN in 2021; now includes pre-primary children at anganwadis
🎯 National Nutrition Mission (POSHAN Abhiyaan)
Flagship programme to reduce stunting, undernutrition, anaemia, and low birth weight through convergent action across ministries.
- Targets: Reduce stunting/undernutrition/low birth weight by 2%/year; anaemia by 3%/year
- Mission 25 by 2022: Reduce stunting from 38.4% to 25%
- ICT-based real-time monitoring; incentivises states and AWWs
- Convergence across ICDS, NHM, Swachh Bharat
| WTO Subsidy Box | Description | India's Concern |
|---|---|---|
| Amber Box | Trade-distorting subsidies; subject to reduction commitments | India's MSP-linked procurement often classified here; exceeds de minimis limits |
| De Minimis | Minimal domestic support exempt from reduction; 10% of value of agricultural production for developing countries | India argues its subsidies are within this limit; others dispute the calculation methodology (1986-88 base year issue) |
| Green Box | Non-trade distorting subsidies; exempt from reduction | India seeks to classify food security procurement under Green Box |
| Peace Clause (2013) | Temporary protection from legal challenges for developing countries' public stockholding even if breaching limits | India pushed for permanent solution; temporary nature creates uncertainty. Bali Ministerial Conference agreement. |
🌾 Free Food Grain Distribution Extended (PMGKAY)
- Free grain under NFSA started January 2023 (initially for 1 year as PMGKAY); extended for 5 years from January 2024 to December 2028
- Benefits ~81.35 crore NFSA beneficiaries (AAY + PHH); total outlay ~₹11.8 lakh crore over 5 years
- Replaces both the NFSA subsidised grain and the additional free PMGKAY grain into one unified entitlement
- Annual outlay: ~₹2 lakh crore; significant fiscal commitment
- States no longer need to separately manage PMGKAY allocations
📱 SMART-PDS Implementation Progress
- SMART-PDS — national-level integrated dashboard now being rolled out with real-time grain movement tracking from procurement to beneficiary
- Integrates FCI, CWC, state warehouses, and FPS transactions in one platform
- Data analytics capabilities for identifying migration patterns and targeting welfare
- Chronic poor connectivity: NIC developing offline e-PoS app for 13,000 FPS in remote areas
🌾 Millets (Nutri-Cereals) in PDS
- 2023 declared International Year of Millets by UN (India's proposal)
- Several states (Odisha, Karnataka, Uttarakhand, Jharkhand) now distributing millets through PDS
- FCI directed to procure millets under MSP operations
- Millets inclusion addresses monocropping problem + improves nutritional diversity of PDS basket
- Fits with the "diversified food basket" reform recommendation
📊 Food Subsidy & Fiscal Pressure 2024-25
- Food subsidy budget 2024-25: ~₹2.05 lakh crore — one of the largest expenditure heads
- PMGKAY merger adds fiscal pressure; government absorbs full cost of 5 kg grain
- FCI's annual buffer carrying cost continues to rise; storage capacity gaps persist
- Economic Survey 2024 flagged need for rationalization of food subsidy targeting
- DBT pilot expansion under discussion — JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile) provides infrastructure
🌍 Global Hunger Index & Nutrition Data 2024
- India ranked 105th out of 127 countries in GHI 2024 (score 27.3 — "Serious" category); GHI 2025: 102nd/123
- India trails Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh in GHI 2024; ranks slightly better than Pakistan and Afghanistan
- NFHS-5 data (2019-21): Stunting 35.5%, Wasting 19.3%, Underweight 32.1%
- Anaemia still high: 57% of women of reproductive age (15-49); 67.1% of children (6-59 months)
- PM-POSHAN scheme coverage expanded to include Bal Vatika (pre-primary) children
Major Challenges:
- Targeting errors: Exclusion (63% poor excluded — NSS 2007) + Inclusion (ghost beneficiaries, NCAER)
- Leakages & diversions: ~28% leakage; ₹69,108 crore annual loss; grains diverted to open market
- Supply chain inefficiencies: Storage imbalance, spoilage, remote area delays
- Rising subsidy burden: ₹2 lakh crore (2024-25); fiscal stress on Union Budget
- Monocropping: Rice-wheat focus; discourages crop diversification
- Urban bias: Better infrastructure in cities; rural/tribal areas underserved
- Migrant exclusion: Card linked to home state FPS (pre-ONORC)
- End-to-end digitalisation: e-PoS, GPS tracking, Aadhaar seeding (SMART-PDS)
- ONORC implementation for migrant portability
- Diversify food basket: Include millets, pulses, edible oil
- Strengthen storage: Modernise FCI godowns, expand scientific silos
- DBT pilots (cautiously): JAM Trinity infrastructure; maintain grain distribution for remote areas
- Social audits, vigilance committees, online grievance portals
- Regular beneficiary list updating; Aadhaar-linked deduplication
- Legal entitlement: 75% rural, 50% urban = 67% total population
- PHH: 5 kg/person/month; AAY: 35 kg/household/month
- Prices: Rice ₹3, Wheat ₹2, Coarse grains ₹1 per kg
- Eldest woman (≥18) = Head of family for ration card
- Food security allowance if supply fails
- Grievance Redressal Officers + State Food Commissions
- Nutrition provisions: MDM, ICDS, maternity benefits
- Rights-based: enforceable in courts (shift from welfare to rights)
Limitations: GHI 2024 (105th rank); anaemia 57% in women; stunting 35.5% children — shows food security ≠ nutritional security. Challenges in implementation: targeting errors, leakages, poor ICDS implementation. NFSA focuses on calories, not dietary diversity.
- Aadhaar seeding: Eliminates duplicates; >99.8% ration cards seeded (at least one member) as of 2024; ~5.8 crore bogus ration cards removed
- Digitisation of ration cards: Online verification; AP, TN, MP, Gujarat
- e-PoS at FPS: Biometric authentication; 95% FPS covered; reduces impersonation
- GPS tracking: Chhattisgarh, Tamil Nadu — trucks from depot to FPS; prevents diversion
- End-to-end computerisation: Supply chain digitised in 31 states/UTs
- ONORC: National portability; 36 states/UTs covered; benefits migrants
- SMS alerts: Beneficiary notification when grain dispatched/arrived
- Online grievance: Toll-free 1967/1800-series; transparency portals
- SMART-PDS: National integrated dashboard
- Social audits by SHGs, NGOs, Vigilance Committees
- Regular beneficiary list revision
- NFSA enacted — legal framework for accountability
- Identification failures: Who decides BPL? Risk of exclusion/inclusion errors
- Leakages in PDS: ~28-46% leakage; ghost beneficiaries
- Storage capacity: FCI godowns often over-capacity; grain wastage
- Food ≠ Nutrition: NFSA provides cereals but not diverse diet; hidden hunger persists
- Fiscal burden: ₹2 lakh crore annual subsidy; sustainability concerns
- State capacity: ICDS/MDM implementation varies; some states poorly equipped
- Anganwadi infrastructure: Poor sanitation, staffing gaps, inadequate food quality
- MSP procurement → Amber Box → exceeds de minimis (10% AoA limit)
- Public stockholding distorts trade: large stocks → price signals disrupted
- Dumping risk: Excess stocks exported at low prices → global market disruption
- US/Australia/EU: Demand stricter limits; claim India's subsidies breach WTO norms
- India's defence: Base year (1986-88) is outdated; Peace Clause needed; food security ≠ trade distortion
- 2013 Bali: Temporary Peace Clause agreed; permanent solution still elusive
1. Under ONORC, a beneficiary must surrender their old ration card and apply for a new one at their current location.
2. ONORC uses Aadhaar-based biometric authentication at e-PoS devices for verification.
3. The scheme allows only intrastate portability, not interstate portability.
4. ONORC data has been used for schemes like e-Shram and Ayushman Bharat.
Which of the above are CORRECT?
1. FCI procures food grains from farmers at MSP and sells to states at Central Issue Price (CIP).
2. FCI is responsible for identification of BPL beneficiaries and issuance of ration cards.
3. FCI maintains operational stocks and strategic reserves on behalf of the Government of India.
4. Buffer norms for FCI are fixed by CCEA on a quarterly basis.
Select the correct answer:
1. India is self-sufficient in food grain production (quantitative dimension) but faces nutritional insecurity (qualitative dimension).
2. The "substitution effect" of cereal subsidies means cheap cereals free up income for nutritious food like milk, fruits, and eggs.
3. The Global Hunger Index 2023 placed India below Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka (but better than Pakistan).
4. The NFSA 2013 specifically addresses micronutrient deficiencies by mandating distribution of pulses and edible oils through PDS.
Which are CORRECT?
UPSC Civil Services Coaching | GS Paper III – Indian Economy Module
PDS · Buffer Stocks · Food Security · NFSA 2013 | Updated with 2025 Current Affairs | For Academic Use Only


