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Economics April 23, 2026 4 min read Daily brief · #15 of 19

India's digital currency push targets its leaky welfare system

The Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — India's digital rupee (e₹) — is being piloted for welfare and subsidy payments to improve efficiency and reduce le...


What Happened

  • The Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — India's digital rupee (e₹) — is being piloted for welfare and subsidy payments to improve efficiency and reduce leakages in government benefit delivery.
  • A CBDC-based digital food subsidy pilot was launched in February 2026 in Puducherry, integrating the digital rupee with the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) framework for direct benefit transfers.
  • The digital tokens are programmable — they can be used only at authorised Fair Price Shops for purchasing foodgrains, eliminating diversion of benefits.
  • Farmers in select districts are receiving irrigation and farm equipment subsidies via the e-rupee, with nearly 1,400 farmers enrolled in one pilot district.
  • Expansion is planned to Chandigarh and Dadra and Nagar Haveli before broader national rollout.

Static Topic Bridges

Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — Architecture and Basics

A CBDC is a digital form of sovereign currency issued and regulated by the central bank. India's e₹ is issued by the Reserve Bank of India and represents legal tender, unlike cryptocurrencies which have no sovereign backing. The RBI launched the retail CBDC pilot (e₹-R) on December 1, 2022.

  • The retail pilot initially covered five cities — Mumbai, New Delhi, Bengaluru, Bhubaneswar and Chandigarh — with eight banks participating, including SBI, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, and Kotak Mahindra Bank.
  • As of March 2025, over 60 lakh (6 million) users were enrolled, with 17 banks participating in the expanded pilot.
  • CBDC operates as a digital token representing legal tender; it can function offline (via NFC) and supports programmability — a key difference from conventional bank accounts.
  • Programmable CBDC allows the issuer to restrict the use of transferred funds to specific purposes, geographies, or time windows.

Connection to this news: The programmability feature of CBDC is the core advantage in welfare delivery — subsidy tokens cannot be misused, diverted, or encashed for unintended purposes, directly addressing the "leaky pipeline" problem in government transfers.

Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) — Framework and Aadhaar Integration

The DBT architecture, rolled out from January 2013, routes government subsidies and welfare payments directly into beneficiaries' bank accounts or wallets using Aadhaar-linked identification, bypassing intermediaries.

  • DBT is enabled by the JAM trinity: Jan Dhan accounts + Aadhaar biometric identity + Mobile connectivity.
  • As of recent estimates, DBT has transferred over ₹40 lakh crore across more than 300 schemes since inception, saving the government significant sums through elimination of ghost beneficiaries.
  • PMGKAY (Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana) provides free foodgrains to beneficiaries under the National Food Security Act, 2013.
  • Integrating CBDC with DBT adds a programmability layer on top of the existing direct transfer framework.

Connection to this news: The CBDC welfare pilot is an evolution of the DBT model — instead of cash transfers that can be spent freely, digital tokens are purpose-restricted, targeting the residual leakage in subsidy programmes.

Financial Inclusion and Welfare Leakages

India's welfare system has historically suffered from leakages estimated at up to 30–40% in some programmes due to ghost beneficiaries, diversion at Fair Price Shops, and intermediary corruption. Digital technology has progressively reduced these gaps.

  • The Odisha Subhadra Yojana (2024) became the first government scheme to use CBDC for direct transfers, distributing ₹10,000 annually to women beneficiaries in digital rupees.
  • Kerala's Kudumbashree pilot (2025) used programmable CBDC to pay waste management workers additional income.
  • PFMS (Public Financial Management System) is being explored as a vehicle for channelling CBDC-based DBT across central government schemes.
  • Concerns about CBDC include financial privacy, exclusion of unbanked populations, and surveillance risks.

Connection to this news: The Puducherry food subsidy pilot represents the most comprehensive CBDC-welfare integration attempted, and its outcome will likely determine the pace of national rollout.

Key Facts & Data

  • e₹ (Digital Rupee) Retail Pilot: Launched December 1, 2022 by the Reserve Bank of India.
  • Banks in pilot: Initially 8; expanded to 17 by March 2025.
  • Users as of March 2025: Over 60 lakh (6 million).
  • Puducherry CBDC food subsidy pilot: Launched February 26, 2026 under PMGKAY framework.
  • Expansion planned: Chandigarh and Dadra and Nagar Haveli.
  • Odisha Subhadra Yojana: First government scheme using CBDC (2024); ₹10,000/year to women beneficiaries.
  • PMGKAY: Provides free foodgrains to beneficiaries under the National Food Security Act, 2013.
  • JAM Trinity: Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile — foundational infrastructure for DBT and CBDC integration.
  • DBT cumulative transfers: Over ₹40 lakh crore across 300+ schemes since 2013.
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — Architecture and Basics
  4. Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) — Framework and Aadhaar Integration
  5. Financial Inclusion and Welfare Leakages
  6. Key Facts & Data
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