India’s pension scheme lags in terms of coverage, contribution


India's Pension Scheme: Coverage & Contribution Gaps — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Scheme name Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS)
Parent programme National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP)
Scheme type Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS)
Implementing ministry Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD)
Year of NSAP launch 1995
Benefit frozen since 2007
Benefit (age 60–79) ₹200/month (Centre)
Benefit (age 80+) ₹500/month (Centre)
Current beneficiaries (IGNOAPS) ≈2.21 crore (221 lakh)
Total NSAP beneficiaries 3.09 crore
Eligibility criterion BPL category
Disbursement mode DBT — bank/post-office savings accounts (~94%)
State top-up range ₹150 (Chhattisgarh) to ₹2,000 (Telangana/AP)
States with zero top-up Goa, Manipur
Other NSAP components IGNWPS (67 lakh), IGNDPS (8.33 lakh), NFBS (3.5 lakh), Annapurna Scheme (8.31 lakh)
Workforce without pension >88% of India's total workforce [S3]
NSAP outlay (2012–13) ₹8,447 crore [S3]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. IGNOAPS provides ₹200/month to BPL elderly aged 60–79 and ₹500/month to those aged 80 and above from the Union government. [S1]
  2. These benefit amounts have remained unchanged since 2007 — over 18 years. [S4]
  3. IGNOAPS covers approximately 2.21 crore (221 lakh) beneficiaries as of the latest PIB data. [S2]
  4. Total NSAP beneficiaries: 3.09 crore across all five sub-schemes. [S2]
  5. NSAP has five components: IGNOAPS, IGNWPS, IGNDPS, NFBS, and Annapurna Scheme. [S2]
  6. NSAP is implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD), not Ministry of Social Justice. [S2]
  7. NSAP was launched in 1995 as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme. [S2]
  8. Age eligibility for IGNOAPS was reduced from 65 to 60 years in 2009. [S1]
  9. >88% of India's workforce lacks any pension coverage. [S3]
  10. Approximately 94% of NSAP benefits are disbursed via DBT (bank/post-office accounts). [S2]
  11. Telangana and Andhra Pradesh contribute the highest State top-ups: ~₹2,000/month. [S4]
  12. Goa and Manipur provide zero State top-up, leaving beneficiaries with only the Centre's ₹200. [S4]
  13. The MoRD task force first recommended inflation-indexation of IGNOAPS benefits in 2013. [S4]
  14. NSAP is constitutionally grounded in Article 41 (DPSP — right to State assistance in old age). [S2]
  15. NSAP outlay in 2012–13 was ₹8,447 crore covering ~3.1 crore beneficiaries. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme has failed to keep pace with inflation, demographic change, and inter-state equity. Critically examine the design flaws and suggest a reform roadmap." (GS-II, 15 marks)
  2. "Examine the role of Centrally Sponsored Schemes in India's social protection architecture with reference to NSAP. How does fiscal federalism affect their effectiveness?" (GS-II, 10 marks)
  3. "Despite constitutional commitment under Article 41, old-age social security in India remains fragmented and inadequate. Discuss." (GS-II, 15 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Pension System (NPS) The contributory, defined-contribution pension framework — contrasts with IGNOAPS's non-contributory model
Atal Pension Yojana (APY) Targets informal-sector workers; complements IGNOAPS in closing the 88% uncovered gap
PM-SYM (Shram Yogi Maandhan) Old-age pension for unorganised workers — overlapping target group
Article 41 (DPSP) Constitutional basis of the State's social security obligations
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) Mission Delivery mechanism underpinning NSAP; Aadhaar seeding and exclusion issues
ILO Social Protection Floor Global benchmark India is measured against; useful for comparative GS-II answers
Fiscal Federalism & CSS Reforms Centre-State cost-sharing, 14th/15th Finance Commission recommendations on CSS rationalisation
Demographic Dividend & Ageing India's ageing population projections that amplify the urgency of pension reform

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: NSAP/IGNOAPS is under Ministry of Rural Development, not Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment — a classic trap since "senior citizens" schemes are often associated with MoSJE.
  2. Confusing IGNOAPS with NPS: IGNOAPS is a non-contributory, tax-funded social pension for BPL elderly; NPS is a contributory, market-linked pension for formal-sector employees — fundamentally different instruments.
  3. Benefit amounts: Many candidates cite ₹200 for all elderly — wrong. The 80+ category gets ₹500/month; ₹200 applies only to the 60–79 bracket.
  4. Scope of NSAP: NSAP has five sub-schemes, not just old-age pension — IGNWPS, IGNDPS, NFBS, and Annapurna are also components; confusing NSAP with IGNOAPS alone is a common mistake.
  5. Year trap: Benefits frozen since 2007 (not 2009 — 2009 was the age eligibility change from 65 to 60); the two milestones are distinct.

11. Sources