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PIB Summaries 08 November 2025

  1. National Social Assistance Programme


Why in News ?

  • The Ministry of Rural Development released an updated performance and digital integration report on NSAP, highlighting full digitization of beneficiaries, Aadhaar-linked transfers, and the launch of a Digital Life Certification (DLC) app (July 2025).
  • NSAP continues to support over 3.09 crore beneficiaries across India, reaffirming its role as a major constitutional commitment under Article 41 (DPSP) to provide assistance in cases of old age, sickness, and disablement.

Relevance

  • GS 2 (Governance ): Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections, Government Policies & Implementation Issues.
  • GS 2(Social Justice) : Inclusive Growth, Social Security, and Poverty Reduction.

Background

  • Launched: 15 August 1995.
  • Type: Centrally Sponsored Scheme (fully funded by the Centre).
  • Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development.
  • Coverage: Rural and urban areas.
  • Objective: Extend financial and food assistance to vulnerable groups below the poverty line (BPL).
  • Constitutional Basis: Article 41 of the Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSP) — “Right to public assistance in cases of unemployment, old age, sickness, and disablement.”

Objectives

  • Provide minimum social security to:
    • Elderly persons (old age)
    • Widows (destitution)
    • Persons with disabilities (divyangjan)
    • Families losing primary breadwinner
    • Food-insecure senior citizens not receiving pension

Components (Five Sub-Schemes)

Sub-Scheme Beneficiaries Central Assistance Key Details
Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS) Elderly (60+) BPL ₹200/month (60–79 yrs), ₹500 (80+ yrs) States may add top-up (₹50–₹5700); avg ₹1100/month
Indira Gandhi National Widow Pension Scheme (IGNWPS) Widows (40–79 yrs) BPL ₹300/month; ₹500 (80+ yrs) Financial aid for subsistence
Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension Scheme (IGNDPS) Disabled (18–79 yrs) BPL ₹300/month; ₹500 (80+ yrs) ₹243.74 cr released (2024–25)
National Family Benefit Scheme (NFBS) BPL family on death of breadwinner (18–59 yrs) ₹20,000 one-time Immediate financial relief
Annapurna Scheme Senior citizens (eligible for pension but not receiving) 10 kg free foodgrains/month Covers non-pensioned elderly

Implementation Features

  • Selection: Gram Panchayats & Urban Local Bodies identify beneficiaries.
  • Disbursement:
    • 94% via DBT into bank/post office accounts.
    • Cash at doorstep in exceptional cases.
  • Monitoring:
    • State-level Nodal Secretary ensures quarterly reporting.
    • Non-reporting → suspension of final quarter funding.
  • Flexibility: States may use any implementing department.

Budgetary Allocation (2025–26: ₹9,652 crore)

Component Allocation (₹ crore)
IGNOAPS 6,645.90
IGNWPS 2,026.99
NFBS 659.00
IGNDPS 290.00
Annapurna 10.00
Management Cell 20.11
Total 9,652.00

Digitization & Reforms

  • Digitization: All beneficiary data (name, Aadhaar, account, mobile) digitized.
  • Aadhaar Linkage: 2.5+ crore beneficiaries linked.
  • PFMS Integration: Ensures transparency, eliminates duplication.
  • New Reform (2025):
    • Digital Life Certification (DLC) App launched (15 July 2025).
    • Allows Aadhaar-based life verification, reducing manual compliance burden.
  • Transparency Portal: www.nsap.nic.in

Performance Snapshot (as of 2025)

Category Beneficiaries (in lakh)
IGNOAPS 221.0
IGNWPS 67.0
IGNDPS 8.33
NFBS 3.5
Annapurna 8.31
Total 309.14 lakh (≈3.09 crore)

Significance

  • Social Security Backbone: Covers vulnerable groups often excluded from formal systems.
  • Fiscal Commitment: One of the longest-running social protection programmes.
  • Digital Governance Model: Aligns with JAM trinity (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile).
  • Reduces Leakages: Direct transfer and Aadhaar verification enhance targeting efficiency.
  • Supports SDGs:
    • SDG 1: No Poverty
    • SDG 2: Zero Hunger
    • SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities

Challenges

  • Low pension amount vs inflationary pressures.
  • State disparities in top-up provisions.
  • Exclusion errors due to outdated BPL lists.
  • Administrative delays in life certification & beneficiary updation.

Way Forward

  • Periodic revision of pension rates to align with living costs.
  • Integration with SECC and PM–SHRAM data for inclusion of informal workers.
  • Strengthen real-time monitoring dashboard at state and district levels.
  • Enhance awareness and grievance redressal for beneficiaries.
  • Converge with schemes like PM–Jan Arogya Yojana and PM–Kisan for comprehensive welfare coverage.

November 2025
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