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[🇧🇩] Family and Farmer's Card
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G Bangladesh Defense

Saif

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Will the real poor get the benefits of the family card?

23 February 2026, 00:43 AM
Nawshad Ahmed

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'The social safety net programmes in Bangladesh, with provisions for cash, food and assets, are expected to reduce and ultimately alleviate poverty and food insecurity.' VISUAL: SALMAN SAKIB SHAHRYAR

The social safety net or social protection programme enables the government to advance the well-being and security of citizens by protecting them from vulnerability and deprivation so they can pursue a better life. The purpose of the family card, proposed by the new government, seems to be the same. Prime Minister Tarique Rahman, during an inter-ministerial meeting held on February 19, instructed the launch of the programme. On the same day, a 15-member cabinet committee led by Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury was formed. The high-powered committee includes ministers, advisers and secretaries who will finalise the beneficiary selection process and eligibility criteria, and propose a rollout mechanism of the initiative. The committee will identify marginalised and low-income families in one upazila per division for the pilot phase to test the programme starting this Ramadan before rolling it out across the country.

The family card programme reportedly has an ambitious target of reaching five crore families eventually and would offer more than double the benefits currently provided under the existing social safety net schemes. At the planning stage, several factors need to be considered. If the weaknesses of the existing social safety net programmes are not taken into consideration during design, implementation and monitoring, the family card may end up like the older programmes.

The social safety net programmes in Bangladesh, with provisions for cash, food and assets, are expected to reduce and ultimately alleviate poverty and food insecurity. As per Article 15 (d) of Bangladesh’s constitution, it shall be a fundamental responsibility of the state to attain a constant increase of productive forces and a steady improvement in the material and cultural standard of lifeof the people through planned economic growth, with a view to securing its citizens’ right to social protection, that is to say, to public assistance in cases of underserved want arising from unemployment, illness or disablement, or suffered by widows or orphans or in old age, in other such cases.

Bangladesh has a fairly long history of social safety net programmes (SSNPs), the first undertaken immediately after independence in 1971. Since then, the number of total schemes implemented is over 120. The country spent about 16 percent of the national budget on SSNPs in recent years, which is 2.5-3 percent of the GDP, covering about 35 percent of citizens. However, a vital question is whether the benefits of the SSNPs reach the targeted beneficiaries—poor households and the vulnerable population?

According to Bangladesh’s 8th Five-Year Plan, there are high exclusion and inclusion errors in the existing SSNPs. However, there is no recent data to estimate the errors, which is necessary to assess beneficiary selection or targeting efficiently. The current process of beneficiary selection often relies on individual knowledge rather than the collection and evaluation of standardised data. Details about people’s income and how much land they own are not checked for accuracy. Due to poor monitoring, it is not possible to have accurate information on the weaknesses of the SSNPs in Bangladesh. However, it is apparent to those who know the programmes that they have very high exclusion and inclusion errors.

Besides, there is no robust, standardised, and operational grievance system for the safety net programmes. Also, regular monitoring and “cleaning” of the beneficiary registry is not done to remove people who are no longer eligible for various reasons, such as death, to make way for eligible, genuine new applicants to the programmes.

Bangladesh adopted the National Social Security Strategy (NSSS) in 2015. The strategy is scheduled to end in 2026. It is a commitment to address the triple problems of poverty, vulnerability, and marginalisation, and it provides a roadmap for establishing a lifecycle-based social protection system covering people’s needs over their entire lifetime. It adopted a lifecycle approach developed by William Beveridge, which involves long-term planning of programmes directed at different stages of life, such as childhood, school age, youth, working age and old age. Over the years, these systems have evolved globally through trial and error and incremental innovations. Taking into consideration risk factors such as natural disasters, climate change and food price shocks, policymakers aimed to create social safety nets, usually in the form of cash, food and other kinds of support, to improve the socioeconomic conditions of people living in poverty.

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The adoption of NSSS coincides with the beginning of the new era of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which set out a global commitment to reduce poverty following the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Since the duration of the current strategy is due to end this year, a new strategy needs to be formulated and adopted, which requires a lot of attention by the government and all relevant stakeholders.

Any large-scale SSNPs are ideally required to follow a life-cycle approach covering all the stages of life. There are many factors which can cause or exacerbate poverty and can occur at any point in a person’s life. The NSSS brought together all SSNPs under five broad themes to align with the lifecycle approach. The needs are different at different stages of life, and families require different support depending on the age of the family members, and vulnerability conditions such as disability, sickness, poverty level, etc. Therefore, no single social SSNP can replace all the existing programmes. A single programme—family card—will not be able to cover all, as programmes are age-specific, implemented by different ministries and departments, and do not necessarily use cash as the only support tool. For example, the objectives of the mother and child benefit programme are to ensure nutrition and good health of women and newborns up to 1,000 days through a combination of cash payment, training of pregnant women and lactating mothers of poor families on parenting, and taking good care of their babies, and ensuring vaccination.

Ultimately, the success of the government’s ambitious family card programme will depend entirely on its execution. If it inherits the systemic flaws of past social safety net schemes—such as unverified data, poor targeting, and weak monitoring—it risks becoming just another inefficient programme. Moreover, as the current NSSS concludes this year, it is crucial to recognise that a single card cannot address all human vulnerabilities. The upcoming strategy must seamlessly integrate the family card with the proven lifecycle approach, ensuring that specific needs like child nutrition, maternal health, and elderly care are not sidelined. A transparent, data-driven, and comprehensive social protection system is the only way forward to sustainably uplift the nation’s poor and marginalised.

Dr Nawshad Ahmed, a retired UN official, is an economist and urban planner. He is currently working as the team leader in a primary school infrastructure need assessment project for the Department of Primary Education, Dhaka.​
 
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'Family Card' completely free, no scope for demanding money: Zahid

Published :
Feb 24, 2026 22:57
Updated :
Feb 24, 2026 22:57

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Social Welfare and Women and Children Affairs Minister Dr AZM Zahid today (Tuesday) said the government's 'Family Card' programme will be implemented entirely free of cost, with no scope for anyone to demand money in exchange for the card.

"If anyone attempts to commit fraud in this regard, legal action will be taken with the assistance of the concerned law enforcement agencies," he said at an emergency press conference held at his residence in Dhanmondi tonight, BSS reports.

Dr Zahid said the programme will be officially inaugurated on March 10, following a decision taken at a Cabinet Committee meeting chaired by the Prime Minister. "Insha'Allah, Prime Minister Tarique Rahman will inaugurate the programme on that day," he added.

Initially, the programme will be launched in 14 upazilas across the country. To ensure smooth implementation, coordination committees have been formed at the union, ward and city corporation levels in each upazila. A first-class officer is assigned to each committee, while officials and employees from various ministries and departments are carrying out their respective responsibilities, the minister said.

He noted that the BNP has long been working for the welfare of the people, particularly focusing on women's empowerment and financial self-reliance. The 'Family Card' initiative aims to strengthen families economically and help build a capable future generation. However, he alleged that a certain quarter is trying to create controversy around the programme.

The minister said there have been reports from some areas that money is being demanded from innocent people in exchange for providing the Family Card. In some cases, such demands are reportedly being made even in places where the programme has not yet begun.

He clarified that the Family Card will be provided completely free of charge and will be handed over to the female head of each designated family, regardless of religion, caste, tribe or political affiliation.

"No lobbying, competition or recommendation is required to receive this card," he said, adding that no one will be excluded or receive extra benefits. The programme will be implemented in phases -- initially in one ward, then gradually expanded to multiple wards and upazilas and eventually nationwide. The government aims to deliver the Family Card to all families across the country within the next four years.

Dr Zahid also announced plans to develop an integrated information collection system under the programme. Data will first be gathered directly from the field and later incorporated into a software-based automated system to ensure transparency and prevent inclusion or exclusion errors. "Maximum efforts are being made to reduce possible errors to zero," he said.

He further informed that financial assistance under the Family Card will be sent directly from Bangladesh Bank to the designated mother's mobile number. Beneficiaries will be able to withdraw the money through bKash or other legal channels. "No intermediary will be involved. Government officials and employees will regularly monitor whether beneficiaries are receiving the money properly," he added.

Urging the public to remain vigilant, the minister said any demand for money in the name of the Family Card should be considered fraud. He called on citizens to inform law enforcement agencies, relevant government officials or the media if they encounter such incidents and to collectively resist any attempt to tarnish the initiative.​
 
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Let the Family Card deliver

FE
Published :
Feb 24, 2026 23:18
Updated :
Feb 24, 2026 23:18

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The proposed Family Card programme has become one of the most talked about policy initiatives of the present government, and for good reason. As reported, prime minister Tarique Rahman is going to formally launch the Family Card on March 10. With this first major move, the newly formed BNP government has acted with notable speed to get its flagship programme off the ground. To that end, it has convened a high-level committee to finalise a pilot scheme in 13 wards under 13 upazilas ahead of Eid. Amid inflationary pressures that have pushed basic necessities beyond the reach of millions, such a targeted support system for low-income families is urgently needed. The idea itself is a real departure from the usual small stipends disbursed for years, offering up to Tk 2,500 per month which is a significant sum of money for a poor household struggling to buy oil, lentils or medicine. This was a central election promise and the government seems keen to deliver on it. But anyone observing social safety nets in this country over the decades knows that a sound policy on paper means nothing if the implementation gets stuck halfway through. The real test is the execution and that is where the government must pour all its energy and attention.

The truth is that Bangladesh has an overcrowded field of social safety net programmes with more than a hundred of them operating at once. Despite this breadth, the benefits somehow keep missing the people who need them most. Studies and planning documents have repeatedly noted that inclusion and exclusion errors are rampant, meaning the non-poor often grab the benefits while many deserving households are left out. The process of selecting needy households has traditionally relied on local knowledge rather than hard data, and when that happens, political loyalty and family connections inevitably creep into the list. The Family Card cannot afford to walk down that same beaten path. Meant to eventually cover 50 million families, the margin for error is zero and the government must build something radically different from the flawed systems of the past.

The good news is that the relevant committee seems to be aware of these dangers and is talking about using National ID data and a centralised household database to pick beneficiaries. That is an essential first step, but it is important to remember that important financial information is often missing from those databases. So, ground level verification will still be necessary. This is the danger zone where good intentions meet local reality, and it is exactly where previous programmes have collapsed into mismanagement. The three-stage monitoring process promised by the social welfare minister has to be more than a slogan. It should involve independent third-party evaluations and a fully operational, accessible grievance system that allows excluded eligible households to appeal their status. Without that kind of rigorous oversight, the programme risks being captured by the same influential quarters who know how to manipulate the system.

The pilot scheme in 13 upazilas is therefore a valuable opportunity to identify every crack before the national rollout. Distribution needs to happen before Eid as planned, not for the sake of optics but to provide immediate relief at least to the families which are struggling to afford basic necessities during this holy month. The nation is watching this experiment with a mix of hope and scepticism having seen over the years too many grand schemes fade into irrelevance. If the government treats the pilot scheme as a genuine learning process and uses its findings to improve the system before scaling it up, the Family Card could well become a strong pillar of social protection and a foundation for families to have a firm footing.​
 
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