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Digital Food Currency

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TOI

Subject: Economics/Government scheme

Context: The Government of India is set to launch a pilot program for Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), also termed Digital Food Currency, in February 2026.

• This initiative targets beneficiaries in Chandigarh, Puducherry, and three districts of Gujarat (Anand, Sabarmati, and Dahod) to streamline the world’s largest free food security program.

About Digital Food Currency:

What is it?

• Digital food coupons are a programmed form of e-Rupee (CBDC). Instead of physical grains or cash transfers, beneficiaries receive digital tokens specifically locked for use at authorized ration shops.

• It serves as a Proof of Concept (POC) for a larger nationwide rollout of digital currency in social welfare.

Developed By:

Regulatory Body: Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

Implementing Authority: Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution, in coordination with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) and State Governments.

• Ensuring that the subsidy is used strictly for foodgrains, preventing the diversion of funds.

• Real-time tracking of every gram of foodgrain distributed.

• Eliminating the need for repeated biometric authentication at Fair Price Shops, which often fails due to connectivity or physical wear and tear.

• Moving rural beneficiaries toward a digital-first economy through the RBI digital wallet.

How it Works?

Direct Credit: Monthly digital food coupons are credited directly to the RBI-enabled digital wallet on the beneficiary’s mobile phone.

Redemption: The beneficiary visits a Fair Price Shop and scans the shop owner’s QR code.

Authentication: The digital tokens are transferred, and the beneficiary receives their entitled free foodgrains.

Validity: The coupons have a set timeframe (e.g., 30 days) to prevent the accumulation of unspent subsidies.

Key Features:

Geographic Focus: The pilot covers diverse regions—Chandigarh and Puducherry (urban UTs with no ration shops) and Gujarat (districts with active PDS).

Feature Phone Support: Options are being explored for non-smartphone users to use the currency via SMS-based vouchers or offline digital solutions.

No Biometric Hassle: Reduces reliance on e-POS biometric machines, making the process faster for senior citizens and manual laborers.

FCI Integration: The grains distributed are supplied directly by the Food Corporation of India (FCI).

Significance:

• Replaces the expensive physical movement of cash (DBT) or grains with a more efficient digital ledger.

• India is among the first major economies to test Programmable CBDC for large-scale social welfare, positioning it as a global leader in FinTech governance.

• Unlike cash DBT, where money can be spent on non-essentials, Digital Food Currency guarantees the Right to Food.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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