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ANTYODAYA ANNA YOJANA (AAY)

Posted 15 Mar 2024

2 min read

Why in the News?

Recently, the Union Cabinet approved extending the sugar subsidy for AAY families through the Public Distribution System (PDS) for two more years i.e. till 2026.

 

Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY)

Objectives

Salient features

  • Ensure food security and create hunger-free India. 
  • Covers the poorest of the poor in India by supply of food and other important commodities for their daily needs at subsidised rates.
  • Ministry: Ministry of Consumers Affairs Food and Public Distribution System
  • Launch year: 2000
  • Beneficiary:  AAY ration card holders
    • States/UTs identify the households under AAY and issue ration cards to eligible households.
  • Intended benefits: AAY households receive-
    • 35 kg of food grains per family per month free of cost under Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) for a period of 5 years with effect from 1st January, 2024.
      • PMGKAY subsumed National Food Security Act (NFSA) and PMGKAY launched during COVID-19 outbreak.
    • 1 kg of sugar per family per month through the Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS).
  • Eligibility Criteria: Initially launched for one crore poorest of the poor families, then expanded coverage thrice to include-
    • Landless agriculture labourers, marginal farmers
    • Rural artisans/craftsmen, such as potters, tanners, weavers, etc.
    • Slum dwellers 
    • Persons earning livelihood on daily basis in the informal sector like- porters, coolies, rickshaw pullers, etc.
    • Households headed by widows or terminally ill persons/disabled persons/ persons aged 60 years or more with no assured means of subsistence or societal support.
    • All primitive tribal households
    • All eligible Below Poverty Line (BPL) families of HIV positive persons.
  • Responsibility of Centre and State: 
    • For food grain distribution: The Central Government, through the Food Corporation of India (FCI), is responsible for procurement, storage, transportation and bulk allocation of food grains to the State Governments.
      • Operational responsibility including allocation within State, identification of eligible families, issue of Ration Cards etc., rest with the State Governments. 
      • Additional cost of making food grains free-of-cost to be borne by Central Government.
    • For sugar subsidy: Central Government gives subsidy of Rs.18.50 per kg per month of sugar to AAY families of participating States. 
      • States/UTs bear the distribution cost, including margin to dealers and retailers as well as the transportation cost.
  • Tags :
  • Ministry of Consumers Affairs Food and Public Distribution System
  • Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY)
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