HomeNewsOpinionFree electricity makes little sense. DBT is the way forward

Free electricity makes little sense. DBT is the way forward

The main plank of the DBT is targeting. Beneficiaries can be identified based on their economic status. No business should be made to supply free, and then wait fretfully for the government to reimburse the resultant loss. Subsidy is an arrangement between citizens and the government. Businesses should not get embroiled in it 

September 30, 2021 / 15:19 IST
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Farmers protesting at the Singhu border dividing Delhi and Haryana for more than nine months now against the three farm laws are also opposed to the Electricity (Amendment Bill) 2021 on the ostensible ground that power being on the concurrent list, states would be progressively marginalised in administering it.

It among other things seeks to establish an Electricity Contract Enforcement Authority (ECEA), which will enforce a performance of contracts in sale, purchase and transmission of power, and proposes the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), a scheme launched in 2013 aiming to transfer subsidies directly into the beneficiaries’ accounts.

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Punjab, the quintessential agrarian state, has been giving power free to its farmers for decades now, though it is admittedly not alone in showering this largesse. Therefore, its farmers spearheading the movement are up in arms against the proposed amendment.

The DBT inculcates discipline as the money received by way of subsidy is limited and fungible (usable for whatever purpose the beneficiary desires), whereas free power inherently is wasteful as human tendency is to be blasé about anything free. Under the existing regime, state governments compensate discoms the losses purporting to arise out of the unbilled power to farmers.