The Mizoram government will revise and restructure ration card holders and cut down subsidies to streamline distribution of food grain (ration) and to mitigate the state’s expenditure on ration, a minister said on Wednesday. Mizoram Food, Civil Supply and Consumer Affairs minister B. Lalchhanzova said that the government has decided to revise beneficiaries covered under the National Food Security Act (NFSA) and those outside the NFSA based on their income level. “Any household living in urban areas whose annual income is less than Rs. 4 lakh and those living in rural areas, which receive less than Rs. 2.5 lakh in a year will be covered under the NFSA. Families, which fall outside these two categories will be treated as non-NFSA beneficiaries,” the minister told a press conference on Wednesday.
Among the existing NFSA beneficiaries, the government will find out well to do families or those not eligible to benefits under NFSA and accordingly register them as non-NFSA or white card holders, he said.Similarly, any existing non-NFSA beneficiary whose annual income is less than 4 lakh for urban and Rs. 2.5 lakh for rural will be converted into NFSA beneficiary, he said. The minister said that the state cabinet in its meeting held on June 18 had decided to stop providing ration or foodgrains to chief ministers, ministers, legislators and Group A officers under the Centre or state governments and public sector undertakings. The cabinet meeting also decided to reduce the subsidy given to non-NFSA beneficiaries from Rs. 25 per kilogram of rice to Rs. 10 per kilogram of rice, he said.
“By stopping ration to VIPs and Group A officer and by cutting down subsidy to non -NFSA card holders, we are expecting to save over Rs. 5.25 crore in a month and more than Rs. 63 crore in a year from the purchase of foodgrains,” Lalchhanzova said.He said that the state’s monthly requirement of rice to be distributed under the public distribution system is over 97,000 quintals. Out of the 97,000 monthly requirement, 37,000 quintals are received free of cost under the NFSA, 14,900 quintals are bought at subsidised rate and another 44,000 quintals are purchased at Rs. 4,000 per quintal through open market procurement, he said.