Food Subsidy Bill may Swell
by 10% in 2018-19 Budget
The Centre’s food subsidy
bill is likely to go up by 10 per cent to around Rs.
1.60 lakh crore in the 2018-19 budget due to rise in minimum support prices but
no change in subsidised rates of foodgrains,
sources said.
The 2018-19 Union Budget
will be presented on February 1.
Since November 2016, the
government is implementing the National Food Security Act, under which foodgrains are supplied every month at a highly subsidised rates of Rs. 1–3 per
kg to over 80 crore people in the country. “For the 2017–18 fiscal, the
government has earmarked Rs. 1,45,338
crore for food subsidy. This is likely to increase by at least 10 per cent in
the 2018–19 fiscal,” sources said.
The total budget
allocation for the food ministry is also expected to increase to Rs. 2.20 lakh crore (inclusive of food subsidy) in the next
fiscal from Rs. 1.96 lakh crore in this year, the
sources added.
The food bill is expected
to rise in 2018–19 because of about 7–8 per cent increase in the minimum
support price (MSP) of rice and wheat, which are supplied to the poor at subsidised rates via ration shops.
Also, the Centre has
decided not to hike the issue price of wheat and rice, which at present is Rs. 2/kg andRs. 3/kg,
respectively, at least till June 2018, the sources said. “The issue price is
likely to be kept unchanged in 2018–19 and therefore the total food bill will
increase. The government will bear the subsidy burden,” the sources said.
Sources also said that the
focus of the food ministry in the next fiscal would be on making ration shops
portable within a district initially and later within a state. This will help
beneficiaries buy subsidised grain in any of the
ration shop located in a district. Also, the ongoing programmes
of computerising the public distribution system (PDS)
will continue next year.