Top ministry sources confirmed that the amount of Rs 2,700 crore set aside for MBP in the Union Budget 2017-2018 was insufficient and, therefore, the scheme will be revised to cater to the birth of the first child alone. Earlier, it was applicable for "the first two live births".
Ironically, this downward revision is accompanied by plans to universalise the scheme, necessitated by the Right to Food Act, 2013.
As per the scheme, pregnant and lactating mothers are provided a cash incentive of Rs 6,000 upon fulfilling several preconditions. This is meant to compensate women for loss of wages and also aims to provide them adequate nutrition and rest before and after delivery as well as enable them to breastfeed the newborn.
"This is clearly a cost-cutting measure. It is completely discriminatory against those who happen to be born as second or third children because clearly they will be deprived of the kind of maternal care, breastfeeding and all the other entitlements they should get.
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An official statement issued by Women and Child Development Ministry days after Modi's speech pegged the total expenditure for the Maternity Benefit Programme to be Rs 12,661 crore, out of which Centre's share was Rs 7,932 crore. However, in the recent Union Budget announcement the ministry received only Rs 2,700 crores -a third of its calculation.
The Centre is also likely to reduce its share of
expenditure per beneficiary by asking states to contribute 50 per cent of the cost. Earlier, as per an official statement, the cost sharing between centre and states was 60:40.
A spokesperson of the WCD ministry defended this move and said, "Across ministries, the Centre and State contribution is 50:50. That is a conscious decision that the entire government has taken".
The centre will be contributing Rs 3,000 to each beneficiary, which is 50 per cent of the total entitlement of Rs 6,000. With Rs 2,700 crore granted for MBP, the ministry is targeting 90 lakh beneficiaries.
According to latest Civil Registration System of 2013, there were a total of 2.24 crore registered births across the country.
Dasgupta also argued that the most vulnerable groups, which include the Dalits, Adivasis, least educated and poorest wealth groups, are most likely to have more than two children.