Equality of Treatment for Persons with Disabilities

Context
- India’s 2011 Census recorded 2.68 crore Persons with Disabilities (PwDs) and today estimates range between 4.5 crore to 6 crore.
- Despite the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016 and Supreme Court recognition of right to live with dignity, disability benefits remain fragmented and discretionary.
- Disability pensions are determined by domicile and State discretion rather than the nature or extent of disability itself.
Schemes and State Measures
- The Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension Scheme is the primary central scheme for disability pension support.
- Disability pensions are jointly administered by the Ministry of Rural Development and Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities.
- Most States offer pensions ranging from only Rs 300 to Rs 500 per month with a few offering Rs 1,000 to Rs 3,000.
- Existing schemes such as PM-DAKSH, NAPS and State-level employer incentives provide a foundation for disability employment support.
Inadequacy of Such Measures
- Low Coverage: The Indira Gandhi Disability Pension Scheme covers only a small fraction of the estimated 4.5 to 6 crore PwD population.
- Meagre Amounts: Most States offer pensions of only Rs 300 to Rs 500 per month, far below any dignified living standard.
- Spending Gap: India spends only 0.02% of GDP on disability welfare compared to South Africa’s 0.12%, Brazil’s 0.45% and OECD countries’ 2.2%.
- Administrative Fragmentation: Dual-ministry administration leads to duplication, delays and diffused accountability in delivering disability benefits.
- Geographic Inequality: Pension amounts vary entirely by State budgets and political priorities making geography the arbiter of survival support.
- Economic Loss: World Bank and UNDP estimate countries lose 3% to 7% of GDP by excluding PwDs from education, employment and social security.
- Discretionary Nature: Benefits are determined by domicile and bureaucratic discretion rather than the nature or extent of disability itself.
Way Forward
- Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR):
- India must establish a MUDPFR to operationalise Article 41 of the Constitution and Section 24 of the RPwD Act 2016.
- A MUDPFR of Rs 8,000 per month for 40 lakh beneficiaries would cost approximately Rs 38,400 crore annually which is only 0.08% of GDP.
- Even Rs 15,000 per month for all eligible beneficiaries would keep expenditure below 0.2% of GDP, thus, fiscally manageable.
- The 2025 Pro Bono Economics report found that socio-economic returns from disability pensions exceed their costs by nearly 48% making it an investment not a welfare burden.
- National Disability Pension Authority:
- India needs a National Disability Pension Authority on the lines of South Africa’s SASSA, Australia’s NDIA and Brazil’s INSS.
- It should oversee eligibility norms, national registry, portability, digital integration, grievance redress and State-wise performance monitoring.
- International Models:
- South Africa provides a national disability grant with uniform eligibility norms applicable across the country.
- Brazil’s BPC guarantees a national minimum income for persons with disabilities regardless of state of residence.
- India should integrate disability pensions with employment support through employer tax incentives similar to the UK’s Access to Work programme.
- Constitutional and Global Commitments:
- A MUDPFR would fulfil India’s obligations under Article 28 of the UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities, SDG 1.3 and the G-20 New Delhi Leaders’ Declaration.
- It would strengthen India’s bid for a UN Security Council seat by translating international commitments into domestic action.
Conclusion: India has successfully standardised food security, healthcare and PM-KISAN at national scale using DBT and UPI. What is missing is the political will to treat disability pensions as a constitutional right rather than a matter of charity. A Viksit Bharat cannot leave its most vulnerable citizens at the mercy of a postcode lottery.

