New
Delhi, March 11:
In
its earlier avatar, Aadhaar merely assigned a unique identity to residents. On
Friday, that changed with the Lok Sabha passing a new Bill, arming the Narendra
Modi regime with statutory backing for targeted delivery of subsidies and
services.
The
Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and
Services) Bill, 2016 was passed by a voice vote after Speaker Sumitra Mahajan
turned down Opposition demands to send the money Bill to a Standing Committee
on Finance.
In
his reply to the short debate on the Bill in the Lok Sabha, Finance Minister
Arun Jaitley noted that thousands of crores of rupees would be saved by routing
government subsidies through the Aadhaar system.
Jaitley
also allayed fears of any privacy breaches stating that the proposed legal
framework specifically covered this aspect.
“This
(law) will empower States to distribute resources to deserving people and save
the resources that undeserving people get,” he said, adding that both the
Centre and State governments would save thousands of crores.
LPG success
Outlining
the success achieved on the targeting of LPG subsidies through Aadhaar cards,
Jaitley said over ₹15,000 crore had been saved by the Centre.
Four States that
had started a PDS delivery pilot on the same lines had saved more than ₹2,300
crore, he added.
With
the Bill now passed by the Lok Sabha, all eyes are now on the Rajya Sabha. Till
late Thursday evening it was not certain whether the Upper House would debate
the money Bill, as it had already allotted the remaining working days (the
session breaks on March 17) to other important work such as passing the Union
Budget.
A
money Bill does not need Rajya Sabha approval. But the Upper House,
where
the NDA lacks a majority, can make recommendations within two weeks of
receiving it. But these are not binding.
The
Business Advisory Committee of the Rajya Sabha, which met on Friday, decided to
allot three hours for the Aadhaar Bill next week. Commenting on the differences
between the earlier Bill, tabled by the UPA, and the latest one, Jaitley said
the earlier one provided for establishment of an Authority and gave the idea of
a unique identity but failed to define its purpose.
Also,
the new Bill would enable the Centre and the States utilise money from the
Consolidated Fund of India for better targeting of benefits at deserving
beneficiaries.
Jaitley
also said that 97 per cent of adults and 67 per cent of minors have Aadhaar
cards.
(This
article was published on March 11, 2016)