NFSA amendments: 7 kg of foodgrains for a person, and maximum 35 kg for a household

Now I have sufficient grounded facts. Writing the study note.


NFSA Amendments: 7 kg per Person, Maximum 35 kg per Household

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Enabling Act National Food Security Act, 2013
Relevant Section Section 3 of NFSA, 2013 (proposed amendment)
Implementing Ministry Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution
Department Department of Food and Public Distribution
Scheme covered Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY)
AAY launch date 25 December 2000
AAY target group Poorest of the poor (BPL households)
Current AAY entitlement 35 kg per household per month (flat)
Proposed AAY entitlement 7 kg per person per month; max 35 kg per household
Cost to AAY beneficiary Free of charge (zero price) under proposed amendment
PHH entitlement (unchanged) 5 kg per person per month
NFSA total coverage ~67% (two-thirds) of India's population
AAY total families covered ~2.5 crore families
Public comment deadline 13 July 2026
Activist demand 14 kg per person (double the proposed quantity)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks


8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-II (Social Justice — Welfare Schemes, Mechanisms for Vulnerable Sections); GS-III (Food Security, Public Distribution System)
Syllabus Heading GS-II: "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States"; GS-III: "Food security in India — functioning of PDS, issues and reforms"

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The proposed amendment to Section 3 of the National Food Security Act, 2013 seeks to replace a household-based entitlement with a per-person entitlement for AAY beneficiaries. Critically evaluate the equity implications of this shift." (GS-II / GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "Food entitlements under the NFSA are not merely welfare measures but constitutionally protected rights under Article 21. Examine the legal and governance dimensions of amending the NFSA." (GS-II, 10 marks)

  3. "The PDS in India has evolved from a universal to a targeted system. Analyse the key reforms in food security entitlements since 2000 and assess the challenges in their effective implementation." (GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) Provided free grain to NFSA beneficiaries; merged with NFSA w.e.f. January 2024 — directly precedes this amendment.
Public Distribution System (PDS) — Reforms Operational backbone for NFSA delivery; digitisation, Aadhaar-seeding, portability (One Nation One Ration Card).
Food Corporation of India (FCI) Procures, stores, and supplies grain for NFSA; reform proposals around decentralised procurement are directly linked.
Right to Food — Constitutional & Judicial Dimensions PUCL v. Union of India; Article 21 jurisprudence; food as a fundamental right.
Priority Households (PHH) vs AAY — NFSA Categories Both are NFSA beneficiary categories; knowing their distinct entitlements prevents exam errors.
Targeted PDS vs Universal PDS Policy debate on exclusion errors (deserving excluded) vs inclusion errors (ineligible included).
Aadhaar-PDS Linkage & Digital Ration Cards Operationally required for per-person identification under the proposed amendment.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing AAY and PHH entitlements: PHH = 5 kg per person per month; AAY (currently) = 35 kg per household per month (not per person). After amendment, AAY = 7 kg per person (max 35 kg/household). Do not conflate the two.

  2. Wrong ministry: The implementing department is the Department of Food and Public Distribution under the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution — NOT the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare.

  3. Treating draft as enacted law: As of June 2026, this is a public consultation draft — it has NOT been introduced as a Bill in Parliament, let alone enacted.

  4. AAY launch year: AAY was launched in 2000 (not 2013). It was incorporated into the NFSA in 2013 but pre-exists the Act by 13 years.

  5. Zero-price provision: The draft makes AAY grain free; PHH grain is NOT free — it is available at subsidised prices. Do not generalise free grain to all NFSA beneficiaries.


11. Sources


Note: WebFetch was disabled per retrieval budget. pib.gov.in and prsindia.org did not return direct results in search snippets; facts are grounded in the newspaper article (Tier 4 primary source), search snippet content, and publicly available scheme data.