The Public Distribution System (PDS) in India began in the 1960s to provide essential commodities like wheat, rice, sugar, and kerosene to many people at affordable prices. It aims to ensure food security and eradicate poverty. PDS operates through a large network of Fair Price Shops across the country. Responsibilities are shared between central and state governments. The central government handles procurement, storage, transportation and allocation of foodgrains while states distribute through shops and identify eligible families. In 2000, the Antyodaya Anna Yojana was launched to provide highly subsidiated grains to the 100 million poorest families. There is potential to fortify PDS foods like wheat and rice with nutrients, but challenges
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The Public Distribution System (PDS) in India began in the 1960s to provide essential commodities like wheat, rice, sugar, and kerosene to many people at affordable prices. It aims to ensure food security and eradicate poverty. PDS operates through a large network of Fair Price Shops across the country. Responsibilities are shared between central and state governments. The central government handles procurement, storage, transportation and allocation of foodgrains while states distribute through shops and identify eligible families. In 2000, the Antyodaya Anna Yojana was launched to provide highly subsidiated grains to the 100 million poorest families. There is potential to fortify PDS foods like wheat and rice with nutrients, but challenges
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Public Distribution System_Dr. Prakash V.Kotecha.ppt
The Public Distribution System (PDS) in India began in the 1960s to provide essential commodities like wheat, rice, sugar, and kerosene to many people at affordable prices. It aims to ensure food security and eradicate poverty. PDS operates through a large network of Fair Price Shops across the country. Responsibilities are shared between central and state governments. The central government handles procurement, storage, transportation and allocation of foodgrains while states distribute through shops and identify eligible families. In 2000, the Antyodaya Anna Yojana was launched to provide highly subsidiated grains to the 100 million poorest families. There is potential to fortify PDS foods like wheat and rice with nutrients, but challenges
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The Public Distribution System (PDS) in India began in the 1960s to provide essential commodities like wheat, rice, sugar, and kerosene to many people at affordable prices. It aims to ensure food security and eradicate poverty. PDS operates through a large network of Fair Price Shops across the country. Responsibilities are shared between central and state governments. The central government handles procurement, storage, transportation and allocation of foodgrains while states distribute through shops and identify eligible families. In 2000, the Antyodaya Anna Yojana was launched to provide highly subsidiated grains to the 100 million poorest families. There is potential to fortify PDS foods like wheat and rice with nutrients, but challenges
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Started in 1960s it was for everyone till 1992 when it was tried for tribal blocks of far and difficult areas to improve the reach and in 1997 it was made targeted to poor people State Government responsibility to identify poor and ensure that they get the benefit When started it aimed for 6 crore (60 million) people with 72 lakh tones of grains
Kotecha, AED, India
Public Distribution System
PDS means distribution of essential commodities to a large number of people through a network of FPS on a recurring basis. The commodities are as follows :Wheat Rice Sugar Kerosene Kotecha, AED, India
Public Distribution System in India
PDS evolved - major instrument of the Governments economic policy for ensuring availability of foodgrains at affordable prices It is an important strategy for poverty eradication and is intended to serve as a safety net for the poor nutritionally at risk. PDS with a network of large number of Fair Price Shops (FPS) is perhaps the largest distribution network of its type in the world. Kotecha, AED, India
Public Distribution System in India
PDS is operated under the joint responsibility of the Central and the State Governments. The Central Government responsibility for procurement, storage, transportation and bulk allocation of foodgrains, The State Governments responsibility For distributing the same to the consumers through the network of Fair Price Shops (FPSs). The operational responsibilities including allocation within the State, identification of families below poverty line, issue of ration cards, supervision and monitoring the functioning of FPSs. Kotecha, AED, India
Public Distribution System ANTYODAYA ANNA YOJANA (AAY)
In order to make TPDS more focused and targeted towards this category of population, the Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) was launched in December, 2000 for one crore poorest of the poor families (increased in by 2009 2.5 crore people) Providing them food grains at a highly subsidized rate of Rs.2/ per kg. for wheat and Rs. 3/ per kg for rice. Kotecha, AED, India
Role of PDS in Fortification
Common goal to reach poor and hard to reach people at an affordable cost System in place and we need to piggy back Supply fortified atta in place of grains is all that we need to do Wheat fortification most practical fortified with iron, folic acid, vitamin A, (iodine), in that priority. Rice fortification and sugar fortification are also promising Kotecha, AED, India
Challenges of Fortification in PDS
PDS for really poor people? Fight corruption and ensure that the real targeted population gets it is. Ensure that it is not recirculated in the open market Who would bear the cost? How shall the quality will be maintained? Technology Transfer to Appropriate authority Accountability between Civil Supply, Health, Social Welfare, whose jurisdiction? Should it be mandatory?
Kotecha, AED, India
Challenges of Fortification Technical Aspects
What food to fortify? What nutrient to use for fortification? Iron being the common most many options available Most of the wheat atta are not produced centrally and so small chakkis will have to be involved extensively How much amount of nutrient elements: depends upon the available dietary source that is so variable in Indian population Kotecha, AED, India