UNIVERSAL BASIC ‘INSURANCE’

Context

  • As the importance of social security came into focus after the major waves of the COVID-19 pandemic, the debate on universal basic income (UBI) began to resurface in policy circles across the globe.
  • However, there is another UBI that needs to be examined in the Indian context, i.e., Universal Basic ‘Insurance’.

Need of Social security systems

  • Before discussing the second UBI, or insurance, it is worthwhile looking at the design options for social security.
  • Income shocks result in a free fall of those living on the line of ‘Basic Living Wages’ down towards the ‘Critical Survival Line’. In any case, a fall that is further below ‘Critical Survival Line’ needs to be prevented as it can be catastrophic — a household can end up facing a poverty trap.
  • Social security systems are like a safety net placed at ‘Critical Survival Line’.

Types of Existing Social Security Nets

  • These social security nets can be of three types.
  • The first type of safety net is basically a social assistance programme meant for the most income-deprived sections of society.
  • The second is an active safety net which works like a trampoline so that those who fall on it are able to bounce back to ‘Basic Living Wages’. The second type of safety net is a scheme with a higher outlay.
  • The third is a proactive safety net which acts like a launchpad so that those who fall on it will not only bounce back but will also move up beyond ‘Basic Living Wages’.
  • The third type of social security net is the most desirable option but requires immense resources and institutional capacity.

Food Security

  • Social security mainly encompasses food security, health security and income security.
  • The Indian food security programme has over 800 million beneficiaries being provided heavily subsidised food grain under the National Food Security Act (NFSA).
  • About 120 million children are provided free lunch under the Mid-Day Meal Scheme.

Health Security

  • On the health security front, for the unorganised sector, there is the Ayushman Bharat Scheme of the central government with over 490 million beneficiaries.
  • In the organized sector, the Central government runs the Employees State Insurance Corporation (ESIC) and Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) catering to 130 million and four million beneficiaries, respectively.
  • Health insurance schemes run by various State governments cover about 200 million people.
  • Despite these large-scale provisions, about 400 million Indians are not covered under any kind of health insurance.

Income security

  • Income security is the trickiest part to tackle in the social security basket.
  • For the organised sector, there are three types of provident fund schemes: (1) General Provident Fund (GPF), (2) Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) and (3) Public Provident Fund (PPF).
  • There are about 53 million New Pension Scheme subscribers in the country.
  • In the unorganised sector, the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Maan-Dhan Yojana (PM-KMY) and the PM-KISAN scheme is availed by about 120 million farmers.
  • Atal Pension Yojana (APY) benefits 40 million people.
  • The Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Maandhan Yojana has about five million beneficiaries while there are about 50,000 beneficiaries under the National Pension Scheme for Traders and Self-Employed Persons (NPS-Traders) scheme.
  • The largest unorganised sector income security programme is the scheme under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, which has about 60 million beneficiaries.
  • Thus, out of 500 million workers in India, about 100 million have no income security (pension, gratuity or other income) coverage.

Issues with Universal Basic ‘Income’

  • Proponents of universal basic income cite the informality of the Indian economy as the hurdle in rolling out schemes such as unemployment insurance in the country.
  • However, besides huge fiscal implications (around 4.5% of GDP), the proposal of universal basic income runs the risk of implementation failure due to large-scale beneficiary identification requirements.

Why Universal Basic ‘Insurance’?

  • The other UBI, i.e. universal basic insurance, is a better proposition for two reasons.
  • One, the insurance penetration (premium as a percentage of GDP) in India has been hovering around 4% for many years compared to 17%, 9% and 6% in Taiwan, Japan and China, respectively.
  • Two, though the economy largely remains informal, data of that informal sector are now available both for businesses (through GSTIN – Goods and Services Tax Identification Number) and for unorganised workers (through e-Shram database of all unorganised workers).

Recommendation

  • As a result of the recent initiatives by the Government, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) portal has 13.5 million registrations and the e-Shram portal has over 280 million registrations.
  • As a prototype of a social security portal based on such data, the social registry portal, ‘Kutumba’, developed by Karnataka is available as a blueprint.
  • Till the Indian economy grows to have adequate voluntary insurance, social security can be boosted through the scheme of universal basic insurance.

 

Mains Practise Question 

[Q] There are good reasons why Universal Basic Insurance is a better proposition than Universal Basic Income. Discuss.

 

Recent News

In News  As India celebrates 75 years of Independence and enters the Amrit Kaal toward 2047, it is time to salute Indian farmers and scientists who transformed the country’s food situation from “ship to mouth” in the mid-1960s to emerging as one of the largest food grain exporters in the...
Read More

In News  One of the most significant economic fallout of the pandemic has been the declining labour market conditions.  And in this background Labour Codes were reformed in 2019-20. Past Labour Reforms  The government has worked to create employment opportunities in the formal and the informal sectors.Schemes such as MUDRA...
Read More

In News  The global politics of data is rapidly evolving as leading and emerging digital economies like the European Union (EU), the U.S,India, Indonesia, and South Africa strive to protect, monetise, and leverage data collected within their territories for domestic purposes.  Data localisation It means restricting the flow of data...
Read More

In News In August 2022, Finnish Meteorological Institute researchers published their study concluding that the Arctic is heating four times faster than the rest of the planet.  The warming is more concentrated in the Eurasian part of the Arctic, where the Barents Sea north of Russia and Norway is warming...
Read More

Context  As India is celebrating 75 years of Independence, the police continue to be in the public gaze, most often for antagonistic reasons.  Constitutional provisions: Police is an exclusive subject under the State List (List II, Schedule 7 of the Constitution). However, the centre is also allowed to maintain its...
Read More