Benazir Income Support Programme
{{Short description|Poverty reduction programme in Pakistan}}
{{Use Pakistani English|date=September 2020}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2016}}
{{Infobox organization
| name = Benazir Income Support Programme
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| native_name = بینظیر انکم سپورٹ پروگرام
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| named_after = Benazir Bhutto
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| logo = BISP Logo.png
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| abbreviation = BISP
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| formation = {{start date and age|df=yes|2008|07|}}
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| focus = Health, Education, Social Protection, Reduce poverty, Enhance financial capacity of poor people
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| type = Social safety net
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| headquarters = F-Block, Pakistan Secretariat, Islamabad, Pakistan
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| methods = Donations, Scholarship
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| owner = Government of Pakistan
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| leader_title = Chairperson of BISP
| leader_name = Rubina Khalid
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| affiliations = Government of Pakistan
| budget = US$ 1.15 Billion {{Cite web|url=https://www.bisp.gov.pk/|title=Ehsaas Income Support Programme buget|website=pass.gov.pk|language=en-US|access-date=2018-10-30|archive-date=7 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200807153344/https://bisp.gov.pk/|url-status=dead}}
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| website = {{URL|http://bisp.gov.pk/}}
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The Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) is a federal unconditional cash transfer poverty reduction program in Pakistan. Launched in July 2008, it was the largest single social safety net program in the country with nearly Rs. 90 billion ($900 million) distributed to 5.4 million beneficiaries in 2016.{{Cite web|url=https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/173127-DFID-lauds-BISP-performance-by-giving-it-overall-A-rating|title=DFID lauds BISP performance by giving it overall 'A' rating|website=www.thenews.com.pk|access-date=2017-01-12}}
The program distributed Rs.19,33
8 (or approx. $195) per annum distributed per month in the year 2016.{{Cite news |date=2016-10-02 |title=Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) stipend increased |newspaper=Dawn (newspaper) |url=https://www.dawn.com/news/1287466 |access-date=5 September 2020}} The stipend is linked to the Consumer Price Index and is paid through a smart card.{{Cite news |date=2016-10-01 |title=PML-N Govt increases stipend for BISP beneficiaries |language=en-US |agency=Associate Press Of Pakistan |url=https://www.app.com.pk/pml-n-govt-increases-stipend-for-bisp-beneficiaries/ |access-date=2017-01-13}} The Department for International Development of the United Kingdom is the largest foreign backer of the program, providing $244 million (or 27%) of the total funds in 2016 with the Pakistani Government providing the rest.{{Cite news |date=2017-01-12 |title=Aid watchdog defends UK funding of Benazir Income Support Programme - The Express Tribune |language=en-US |newspaper=The Express Tribune |url=http://tribune.com.pk/story/1292459/aid-watchdog-defends-uk-funding-benazir-income-support-programme/ |access-date=2017-01-12}}{{Cite news |title=Pakistan cash transfers defended as MP says aid programme amounts to 'exporting the dole' |newspaper=The Telegraph |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/01/03/pakistan-cash-transfers-defended-mp-says-aid-programme-amounts/ |access-date=2017-01-12}}
A separate ministry, Ministry of Poverty Alleviation and Social Safety (PASS), was established{{Cite web |title=About us - PASS |url=https://www.pass.gov.pk/Overview.aspx}} and BISP was made part of the Poverty Alleviation and Social Security Division.{{Cite web|last=Shaheen|first=Sardar Sikander|date=2020-03-01|title=BISP to function under federal government's Ehsaas Kifalat Programme|url=http://www.brecorder.com/news/576055|access-date=2020-12-27|website=Brecorder|language=en}}
History
The Benazir Income Support Programme was established in 2008 by Yousaf Raza Gillani who took the advice of President Asif Ali Zardari. The program's name is a tribute to former Prime Minister and wife of President Asif Ali Zardari, Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007.{{Sfn|Shahzad 2011}}
Since 2005, the purchasing power of many Pakistani families has been eroded by high inflation and the increasing cost of food and oil. BISP arose against this backdrop as a means to address reductions in purchasing power.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}} Along with the economic development aims of the program, BISP also seeks to empower women by presenting cash transfers directly to female members of households.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}}
BISP is currently the largest aid program in Pakistan and the government's third largest budgetary allocation. BISP spending accounts for 0.3% of Pakistan's GDP.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}}
In the 2008–2009 fiscal year, more than 3 million Pakistani families received cash transfers through BISP; this figure accounts for 1.5% of the general population{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}} and 10% of the population below the poverty level. For the 2009–2010 fiscal year, the program was expanded to cover 5 million low-income families.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}} At the program's start in 2008, the Pakistani government allocated RS 34 billion, or $425 million, for BISP; the allocation doubled to RS 70 billion, or $875 million in the following year.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}}
The Benazir Income Support Programme is planning to launch a new initiative that encourages human capital development through a conditional cash transfer. The Waseela-e-Taleem initiative will condition cash payments on primary school enrolment for the children of eligible families.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}} On 18 June 2017, BISP launched an e-commerce platform for its beneficiaries.{{Cite web|url=https://medium.com/millennialpk/pakistans-new-plan-to-eradicate-poverty-use-embroidery-4a14b5cdfac0|title=Pakistan's New Plan to Eradicate Poverty: Use Embroidery|last=Wani|first=Shahrukh|date=2017-06-18|website=Medium|access-date=2017-06-24}}
Program structure
The Benazir Income Support Programme has been implemented in the provinces of Punjab, Sindh, Baluchistan, and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. The program also operates in the federally administered regions of Azad Jammu and Kashmir, and the Islamabad Capital Territory.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}}
In its first year of operation, recipients of BISP cash transfers were identified and selected by Parliamentarians through a process of recommendation. Each Parliamentarian received 8,000 forms to distribute throughout his or her constituency. Selected individuals underwent an eligibility verification process through the National Database and Registration Authority. A final list of eligible families was generated and sent to the postal service. Funds were disbursed from the Treasury directly to the postal service and then delivered to the female head of eligible households.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}}
In April 2009, the process for identifying and selecting eligible families through Parliamentarian recommendation was ended. The identification process has been reformed and now uses a Poverty Scorecard. Through the Poverty Scorecard, families are identified through a proxy means test.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}} The Poverty Scorecard has been approved by the World Bank and requires families to answer 13 questions regarding assets and expenses in a survey.{{Sfn|Shahzad 2011}} The poverty survey has been tested in 16 districts and will be distributed nationwide.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}}
Internal monitoring systems are being developed to track deliveries and payment amounts to eligible families. Another mechanism to address corruption and political favouritism is being considered that would allow a neutral third party access to the list of eligible families to verify eligibility.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}}
Recently, BISP has expanded to include several special initiatives. The Waseela-e-Haq program empowers women through the provision of small loans. A vocation training program, Waseela-e-Rozgar, offers members of eligible families up to 1 year of professional training. The Waseela-e-Sehat program provides financial assistance specifically for obtaining basic health care. BISP will launch its first program that conditions cash payments on schooling. The Waseela-e-Taleem initiative will require families receiving cash payments to enroll children between the ages of 5 and 12 to enroll in primary education.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}}
BISP also provides cash payments for emergency relief efforts. These payments are similar to the payments received by low-income families but are distributed to families affected by terrorism, war, and natural disasters such as earthquakes.{{Sfn|Benazir Income Support Programme}}
Eligibility
To be eligible for cash payments under BISP, families must earn less than RS 25,000 per month; equivalent to $90.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}} Further eligibility requirements stipulate that:
- Families must have a female applicant holding a valid ID card
- An individual applicant must be a widowed or divorced female without male family members
- Eligible families include those with physically or mentally disabled individuals
Families deemed ineligible for cash payments through BISP include those with:{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}}
- Members employed by the Pakistani government, army, or any other government-affiliated agency
- Members drawing a pension or receiving post-retirement benefits from the government
- Family members owning more than 3 acres of farmland or more than 80 square yards of residential land
- Members receiving income from other sources
- Members holding a machine readable passport
- Members with a National Identity Card for Overseas citizens
- Members with a bank account excluding microfinance banks and those catering to low-income families
Benefits
Eligible families receive cash payments of 8500 quarterly. This amount increases the purchasing power for families earning approximately RS 2,800 each month by 20%. Most low-income families spend 50–70% of total income on food alone. According to BISP, the cash payment of RS 8,500 every quarter, or RS 2,833 each month, will allow a family of 5–6 to purchase 20–25 days worth of flour.{{Sfn|Handayani-Burkley 2009}}
Criticism
Since the program's inception, critics have pointed out several overall flaws in the Benazir Income Support Program design. Some claim that the amount of RS 3000 bi-monthly, or RS 1,500 per month, is not enough to move impoverished families above the poverty line as this would require RS 2,550 per month. Another major flaw with BISP is its lack of conditionality. Conditional cash transfer programs in Latin America have experienced greater degrees of success because recipient families must meet certain requirements before receiving a cash payment.{{Sfn|Shahzad 2011}} These programs build human capital through requiring recipients to enroll their children in primary education, participate in health and nutrition seminars, and visit health care providers.{{Sfn|Rawlings-Rubio 2003}} The BISP programmes also seems to be moving to this direction given that that Waseela-e-Taleem and Nashonuma component are both conditional requiring beneficiaries' to change both health and education seeking behaviour. The Unconditional Cash Transfer component of the BISP previously renamed Kifalat, is also being built up to encourage savings which would be matched by through government subsidies.{{Cite web|url=https://projects.worldbank.org/en/projects-operations/project-detail/P174484|title = Development Projects : Pakistan Crisis-Resilient Social Protection (CRISP) - P174484}} Some experts have argued that attaching conditionalities to social safety net programmes moves them away from the conception of Negative Income Tax initially proposed by Milton Friedman by assuming that it is behaviour on part of the beneficiaries which is to blame for their poverty while ignoring deep rooted structural inequalities in society which may limit individual's ability to effectively participate in the labour Market. One such example from Pakistan is that of transgenders who would be restricted from accessing the labour market in any meaningful manner unless the society around them changes.
There have also been accusations of corruption and political favouritism. By some estimates, only 50–60 percent of beneficiaries actually receive cash payments from BISP. The previous method of identifying families through the recommendation of Parliamentarians was flawed. Many have claimed that Parliamentarians simply recommended their own family and friends to receive cash payments.{{Sfn|Shahzad 2011}} It has been pointed out that there is a disproportionate number of families receiving BISP aid in geographic areas where the ruling Pakistan People's Party dominates. For example, in the Prime Minister's hometown of Multan, there is twice the number of people receiving BISP payments than in Lahore, the opposition party's stronghold. Punjab, another area where opposition parties dominate, has the lowest ratio of eligible families—1,974 for every 100,000 people; versus 6,829 families for every 100,000 people in Sindh, the ruling party's stronghold. Beneficiaries have also complained that the postal service charges an additional RS 100 to RS 200 for each delivery of payment.{{Sfn|Shahzad 2011}}{{cite news|url=https://tribune.com.pk/story/331740/benazir-income-support-programme-does-the-cash-flow-to-blue-eyed-voters |newspaper=The Express Tribune (newspaper)|date=4 February 2012|title=Benazir Income Support Programme: Does the cash flow to blue-eyed voters?|first1=Zahid|last1=Gishkori|first2=Irfan|last2=Ghauri|first3=Gulraiz|last3=Khan|accessdate=5 September 2020}}
Other critics have argued that as the Benazir Income Support Programme makes up a substantial portion of the Pakistani government's budget, impact evaluations should be conducted to evaluate the benefits and actual need for the program.{{Sfn|Shahzad 2011}}
List of chairpersons
class="wikitable |
align=center|Name of Chairperson
!align=center|Entered Office !align=center|Left Office |
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Farzana Raja
|July 2008 |March 2013 |
Vacant
|March 2013 |November 2013 |
Enver Baig
|November 2013 |November 2014 |
Vacant
|November 2014 |February 2015 |
Marvi Memon
|February 2015 |June 2018 |
Vacant
|June 2018 |October 2018 |
Sania Nishtar
|October 2018 |April 2022 |
Shazia Marri
|April 2022 |9 May 2024 |
Rubina Khalid
| 9 May 2024 | Incumbent |
References
{{reflist}}
=Sources=
- {{Cite web |title=Benazir Income Support Programme |year=2011 |url=http://www.bisp.gov.pk/ |ref={{SfnRef|Benazir Income Support Programme}} }}
- {{Cite book |last1=Handayani |first1=Sri Wening |last2=Burkley |first2=Clifford |year=2009 |title=Social Assistance and Conditional Cash Transfers: The Proceedings of the Regional Workshop. |publisher=Asian Development Bank |isbn=9789715618885 |url=http://www.adb.org/publications/social-assistance-and-conditional-cash-transfers-proceedings-regional-workshop |ref={{SfnRef|Handayani-Burkley 2009}} }}
- {{Cite book |last1=Rawlings |first1=Laura B |last2=Rubio |first2=Gloria M. |year=2003 |title=Evaluating the Impact of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs: Lessons from Latin America |ref={{SfnRef|Rawlings-Rubio 2003}} }}
- {{Cite web |last=Shahzad |first=Farakh |date=25 June 2011 |title=BISP—A Commitment Falling Short |url=http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2011/06/25/news/profit/bisp-a-commitment-falling-short/ |ref={{SfnRef|Shahzad 2011}} }}
{{Cabinet Secretariat of the Government of Pakistan}}
Category:Government of Yousaf Raza Gillani
Category:Memorials to Benazir Bhutto