The Finance Ministry, in an office memorandum, said it is imperative that Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) may be extended beyond the transfers from the Centre directly to individuals to all schemes and projects that have any component of cash benefits transfer to individual beneficiaries.
"Ministry/Department will prepare a digitised list of all beneficiaries for the same. The list will be populated with Aadhaar number by June 30, 2015. E-transfer of funds will start in all schemes not later than April, 2015. The deadline for this task would be April 30, 2015," it said.
Presently, Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) in 35 schemes and DBTL (PAHAL) have been expanded across the entire country.
Meanwhile, CRISIL said DBT will likely prove to be a game changer in food subsidy.
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"We estimate that DBT could help the government save as much as 20 per cent (or Rs 25,000 crore) in food subsidy expenditure by eliminating costs associated with procuring, distributing and storing foodgrains," it said.
"We estimate that at fiscal 2016 prices, the cash transfers under the DBT will amount to almost Rs 5,800 per year for a family of five, which will implicitly raise their disposable income," CRISIL added.