The union government has asked the North Eastern states to expedite the computerisation of the Public Distribution System (PDS) to ensure greater efficiency and transparency, and to check large-scale fraud. “After the digitisation of ration cards and computerisation of PDS, transparency and performance of the government-sponsored food supply system will improve and various fraudulent acts and falsification will be curbed,” said Union Food and Public Distribution Department Director D K Gupta.
He said, “After full operationalisation of the computerised PDS and digitisation of ration cards, infiltrators and fake beneficiaries will not be able to benefit from PDS. Infiltration of people in the North Eastern region from across the borders is a major issue.”
India’s North Eastern region, comprising eight states and home to 45.58 million people (2011 census), borders China, Myanmar, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Nepal. Some states have trade ties with some of these countries, especially Bangladesh and Myanmar.
The official said that while digitisation of ration cards in most states, including in the North East, was completed, progress of Aadhaar seeding in ration cards was very poor in most of the states in the region, except Tripura and Sikkim.
He said seeding of Aadhaar in ration cards in Tripura and Sikkim was at over 90 per cent, but in the other North Eastern states this was on an average only at 30 per cent.
Gupta, who was in Agartala to address a two-day workshop on ‘Digital Transformation and Automation of PDS Operations’, said that the central government had asked all the northeastern states to complete digitisation of ration cards and computerisation of PDS by June this year.
He said the centre had introduced ‘Integrated Management of Public Distribution System (IM-PDS)’ to integrate the PDS system, portals of states and Union Territories with the Central System and portals, introduction of National Portability and de-duplication of ration cards and beneficiaries.
“The new scheme would bring more transparency and efficiency in the distribution of food grains as it would improve the mechanism to identify fake and duplicate ration cards and provide the option to PDS beneficiaries to lift their entitled food grains from Fair Price Shops of their choice. Under the ‘End to End Computerisation of PDS Operations’, financial and technical assistance is being provided to states and Union Territories. For the northeastern states, the funding pattern is on a 90:10 ratio, where 90 percent of the total expenditure was borne by the centre and 10 percent contributed by the state concerned,” the official added.
To implement the ‘End to End Computerisation of PDS Operations’ and IM-PDS, the central government has constituted an Empowered Committee.
The PDS has been operated with a network of about 50,000 Fair Price Shops in the northeastern states. The operation is carried out under the joint responsibility of the central and state governments.
The Food Corporation of India is the main supplier of food grains and other items for the PDS.