The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said its observation is based on the results of a microsimulation exercise it conducted on India.
In its annual Fiscal Monitor report, the IMF carried a special box on the results from the microsimulation analysis of a policy reform that replaces food and fuel subsidies in India with a Universal Basic Income (UBI).
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The UBI will outperform the public distribution system in terms of coverage, progressivity and generosity, it said.
The simulations are intended to illustrate the potential benefits from using a UBI both to reform a current but inefficient social safety net (in this case, the PDS) and to generate public support for an ambitious fuel price reform.
Based on Indias 201112 National Sample Survey, the analysis assesses the welfare impact of replacing the subsidies that existed in that year with a UBI in a fiscally neutral manner.
The IMF said the fiscal envelope devoted to the UBI is equivalent to the combined fiscal cost of the PDS and energy subsidies in 201112, which would finance an annual uniform UBI for every person in India of Rs 2,600 rupees (about USD 54) in 201112, equivalent to about 20per cent of median per capita consumption in that year.
Although such a transfer is more modest than that often discussed in public debate, it would still incur a fiscal cost of approximately threeper cent of the GDP, the IMF said.
The report notes that since the analysis is anchored in 201112, it does not take into account the significant subsidy reforms enacted by the government of India in recent years.
In general, reaping the potential gains from the introduction of a UBI would need careful planning to overcome political, social and administrative challenges, especially when subsidy reforms involve such large price increases, it said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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