The Karnataka government is replacing the extra 5 kg of rice under its Anna Bhagya scheme with a more diversified “Indira Food Kit,” aiming to improve dietary balance, reduce leakage in the supply chain, and save costs while still ensuring families get essential food staples.
Glimpse:
Under the revamped Anna Bhagya scheme, Karnataka will now provide 5 kg of rice half of the previous allocation along with the new Indira Food Kit to eligible households. The kits will include staples like pulses toor dal or moong dal, cooking oil, sugar, salt, and other essential items. The change targets approximately 1.26 crore ration-card families, with provisions scaled by family size. The government expects this shift to generate savings of over ₹300 crore annually, while addressing problems like rice diversion into black markets and undernutrition from rice-heavy diets. Beneficiary surveys showed strong support over 90% prefer diversified kits to extra rice.
Karnataka is shaking up one of its most critical welfare schemes. The Anna Bhagya scheme long known for giving 10 kg of free rice per family every month will now be modified so that instead of 10 kg of rice, families get 5 kg of rice + the Indira Food Kit which includes pulses, oil, sugar, and salt.
Nutrition matters: Rice is great for calories, but when many meals are rice-heavy, protein, fats, and essential micronutrients suffer. Pulses like toor or moong, and items like oil and sugar, help round out the diet.
Misuse and diversion: There have been reports that the extra rice was being hoarded or diverted to black markets. By shifting the kind of items supplied, the government hopes to reduce such leakages.
Cost savings & efficiency: The extra 5 kg rice from the state adds up in cost. By switching to food kits, the state projects savings of roughly ₹300 crore annually. The new scheme is estimated to cost less while delivering more balanced nutrition.
Here are some specifics:
The scheme will reach about 1.26 crore families.
The kit size will vary with family size: smaller households get lesser kits, larger ones more.
Distribution continues via Fair Price Shops under the Public Distribution System.
There is strong beneficiary preference surveys indicate over 90% favor food kits with pulses and other essentials over just rice.
“Rice alone fills the plate—but doesn’t always fill the need. With the Indira Food Kit, we’re trying to nourish beyond calories, ensuring families get pulses, fats, and essentials that truly matter.”
By
HB Team
