Syllabus: GS3/Economy; Financial Inclusion
Context
- The idea of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) is now emerging as a pragmatic policy imperative, as India grapples with widening inequality, technological disruption, and persistent welfare inefficiencies.
What Is Universal Basic Income (UBI)?
- Universal Basic Income (UBI) is a social welfare policy proposal under which every citizen receives a regular, unconditional cash transfer from the government, ensuring a minimum standard of living and social security.
- Its core principles include:
- Universal: Given to all citizens, irrespective of income level, employment status, or wealth.
- Unconditional: No preconditions such as work requirement, asset ownership, or means testing.
- Periodic: Paid at fixed intervals (monthly, quarterly, etc.), not as a one-time grant.
- Cash Payment: Delivered directly in cash or through bank transfer, allowing people to spend according to their needs.
What Makes UBI Different From Other Welfare Schemes?
- Traditional welfare programs rely on complex eligibility criteria, circumstances and bureaucratic proof of need.
- However, UBI focuses on every citizen, regardless of income or employment status, receiving a periodic cash transfer.
- UBI’s universality eliminates the stigma of ‘being poor enough’ and prevents the exclusion errors that plague targeted schemes.
- It ensures that no one is left behind due to administrative inefficiency or arbitrary eligibility filters by providing a basic floor of income security.
Rationale / Need for UBI in India
- Job Displacement: Automation, AI, and robotics threaten traditional employment. For example: McKinsey projects 800 million jobs could be lost globally by 2030.
- Precarious Work & Inequality: Gig economy lacks social security. India’s top 1% owns 40% of the wealth (World Inequality Database 2023).
- Administrative Inefficiency: Fragmented welfare architecture with duplication and leakage. UBI via Aadhaar-linked DBT can streamline delivery.
- Economic Stabilizer: Increases purchasing power and demand during economic downturns.
- Social & Psychological Well-being: Reduces stress, improves nutrition and education (as seen in SEWA pilot in Madhya Pradesh).
- Moral and Gender Justice: Recognizes unpaid care work (mostly by women) as an economic contribution.
Challenges and Considerations
- Inflation: Historical evidence contradicts the claim that UBI triggers runaway inflation.
- Major inflations occur due to production collapse or external debt crises — not from moderate income transfers.
- If funded prudently, UBI stabilizes demand and prevents hardship without price spirals.
- Fiscal Feasibility: A minimal UBI equal to the poverty line (₹7,620 per person annually) would cost about 5% of GDP.
- Funding can be achieved by rationalizing subsidies, introducing progressive taxation, and phasing implementation — beginning with vulnerable groups like women, the elderly, and persons with disabilities.
- Technological and Access Challenges: Inclusion gaps persist in remote and tribal regions despite digital advances.
- Ensuring universal access to banking, mobile connectivity, and financial literacy will be critical before full-scale rollout.
Evidence From India and Beyond
- Pilot programs in Madhya Pradesh (2011–13) led by SEWA demonstrated measurable gains: improved nutrition, school attendance, and small enterprise growth.
- Similar global trials — from Finland to Kenya — have found better mental health, food security, and no decline in work participation.
- These results suggest that a well-designed UBI can enhance both social and economic outcomes.
Case for UBI in India
- Administrative and Moral Efficiency: India’s welfare architecture, though vast, remains fragmented and leak-prone.
- Multiple overlapping schemes lead to duplication and exclusion. A UBI, enabled by mature digital platforms like Aadhaar and Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), can streamline welfare delivery.
- Inequality Beyond the Headlines: The World Inequality Database (2023) reports India’s wealth Gini coefficient at 75 — with the top 1% owning 40% of national wealth.
- The apparent prosperity reflected in GDP growth (8.4% in 2023–24) conceals deep divides, evident in India’s 126th rank on the World Happiness Index.
- A UBI, by distributing purchasing power more equitably, can reconnect economic growth with human wellbeing.
- From GDP to Genuine Prosperity: As Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, GDP alone does not measure wellbeing or justice.
- A modest, unconditional transfer to every Jan Dhan account can reignite local demand, stabilizing consumption for millions living paycheck to paycheck.
- Growth, then, becomes tangible — visible in kitchens, not just spreadsheets.
- Redefining the Citizen-State Relationship: UBI aims to transform the citizen’s relationship with the state from one of dependency to one of rights.
- By decoupling welfare from political patronage, UBI weakens populist ‘freebie’ politics and restores accountability to governance.
- Citizens become participants, not petitioners — empowered to demand better schools, healthcare, and ecological responsibility.
- Not a Cure-All, but a Foundation: A UBI will not replace public investment in health, education, or infrastructure, but it can form a secure base upon which citizens build productive lives.
- It recognizes unpaid care work, largely done by women, as a vital economic contribution — embedding gender justice into welfare design.
Conclusion
- A universal basic income is not a luxury but a necessity, in an age of deepening insecurity, automation, and inequality, and the foundation of a renewed social contract.
- India can reimagine the 21st-century welfare state by embedding universality, dignity, and autonomy into welfare policy — not as a patchwork of schemes, but as a guarantee of shared citizenship.
| Daily Mains Practice Question [Q] Examine the feasibility of implementing Universal Basic Income (UBI) in India considering fiscal, administrative, and political constraints. |
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