Social safety and poverty alleviation

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  • The government is trying hard

 

The prime duty of the state and the governments running the state affairs is to promote the wellbeing of the people by pursuing policies aimed at poverty alleviation and providing safety nets for the vulnerable sections of the society in conformity with the modern concept of a welfare state. Poverty and economic inequalities in a society and state can have serious social and political repercussions to the extent of destabilising the state itself. That provides the rationale for most of the modern states laying such an emphasis on poverty alleviation and providing safety nets for the poorer sections of the society. The Quaid in his speech to the constituent assembly on 11 August 1947, while dilating on the challenges facing the new nation and the steps he thought the constituent assembly and the government should take to realise the objectives of independence, said “Now if we want to make this great state of Pakistan happy and prosperous we should wholly and solely concentrate on the well-being of the people, and especially of the masses and poor”.

Article 38(d) of the Constitution says “the state shall provide basic necessities of life, such as food, clothing. housing, education and medical relief, for all such citizens, irrespective of sex, caste, creed or race, as are permanently or temporarily unable to earn their livelihood on account of infirmity, sickness or unemployment”. Unfortunately, this article of recommendatory nature has never been given due priority by successive governments through some half-hearted attempt were made from time to time to address a specific issue. No comprehensive and coordinated efforts were unfurled to deal with the issues listed in this article.

Ostensibly it seems a very ambitious undertaking but, as they say, where there is a will, there is a way. The concept propounded by the government is beyond reproach. The programme is unprecedented as far as its envisaged wholesome impact and reach is concerned

However, the social safety and poverty alleviation programme launched by the PTI government in the name of ‘Ehsas’, is the first ever all-encompassing effort launched to mitigate the suffering of the vulnerable sections of the society purported to cover the areas identified in Article 38(d). The programme envisages the giving of saving accounts and mobile phones to 5.7 million women, which will enable them to access their bank accounts; the increase in cash transfers to women from Rs5,000 to Rs5,500; creation of 500 digital hubs at tehsil level where poor people could go to access their bank accounts as well as look for jobs; arranging legal assistance for the poor in difficult times; setting up call centres to provide legal assistance to the people as well as grants to children who want to study; organising money by the Tahafuz programme office for the people needing medical help who do not already possess Insaf health cards; building of shelter homes for the homeless; assisting street children through public-private partnership as well as helping transgender persons who suffer maltreatment in the society; facilitation of the daily wage workers through Tahafuz programme and initiating a movement against forced work from children under bonded labour; building of homes for 100 orphan children through Baitul Mal in the next four years.

The programme further envisages initiation of policies to address nutrition problems purported to provide de-worming, iron, folic acid as well anaemia supplements at basic health units; creation of a multi-sectoral nutrition coordination body at Prime Minister’s office for the purpose; provision of goats to women in the rural areas as well as desi chickens so that their children can have access to milk besides generation of some income; provision of seeds to rural women for growing vegetables to eat and sell; provision of special sticks, wheelchairs, crutches for disabled persons; setting up of 20 centres for disabled persons in the less developed areas; earmarking of Rs5 billion for giving interest-free loans to the poor who are too poor to build their own houses; increase in the EOBI pensions; building of five Ehsas homes for elderly people by Baitul Mal; creating awareness among the students from the underdeveloped areas about their constitutional right to receive education and provision of vouchers to the intending students of the areas where there are no government schools so that they can attend private schools; provision of internet service and mobile phones to the students from the remote areas so that they can benefit from e-learning; setting up of one-window operation for the labourers wanting to go abroad and posting of welfare attachés in all the embassies of Pakistan to facilitate the Pakistani labourers; ending exploitation of labourers and workers in the villages and in the informal sector and employed as domestic workers by bringing them into the formal sector to protect their rights besides introducing a data-based pension scheme for them.

An incisive glance on the envisaged programme reveals that it is not only designed to help the poorer sections of the society and the needy but is also meant to elevate the people above cash payments and enable them to acquire skills and sources of incomes for themselves. The government envisages the enhancing of the allocation for the programme from Rs60 billion to Rs120 billion by the year 2020.

With a view to make it a one-window operation and to coordinate the implementation of the programme, a separate ministry for social protection and poverty alleviation is being set up. The move is designed to bring all the organisations working on helping the poor, under one umbrella. To ensure transparency and efficiency, the government is collecting required data through the help of the already conducted surveys and planning new ones where required, making use of the available modern technology.

Ostensibly it seems a very ambitious undertaking but, as they say, where there is a will, there is a way. The concept propounded by the government is beyond reproach. The programme is unprecedented as far as its envisaged wholesome impact and reach is concerned. It also assumes uniqueness in the sense that, as revealed at the time of its launch by the Prime Minister, the government is going to include these activities in the chapter of fundamental rights of the Constitution by amending the Article 38(d) which confers only recommendatory responsibility on the government. Once it becomes part of the fundamental rights as enunciated in the Constitution it would become obligatory for every government to shoulder that responsibility. In case there is any slackness on the part of the government any citizen would be able to challenge it in the court of law. If that amendment is carried out, it would bring a radical change in the way the governments deal with the vulnerable sections of the society. However only time will tell and determine how far the programme goes in achieving its desired objectives.