CM Samrat Choudhary: Bihar to pay ₹1,424 cr pension to 97.84 lakh
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Bihar Chief Minister Samrat Choudhary announced on Thursday, 9 July 2026 that the state government will transfer ₹1,423.94 crore in social security pension to 97.84 lakh beneficiaries under central and state pension schemes, marking what his office has designated 'Bihar Pension Divas' (Bihar Pension Day).
Context
In his post, CM Choudhary stated that the Bihar government has ensured monthly payment of ₹1,100 per beneficiary on the 10th of every month via Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) under the social security pension framework. The beneficiaries include senior citizens, persons with disabilities, and widowed women. The Chief Minister described the initiative as 'an important step towards providing economic security and dignity' to these groups.
Policy Backdrop
The disbursals draw on a combination of the National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP) — the central government's flagship scheme launched in 1995 to extend pensions to those outside formal employment — and state-funded top-ups. Bihar shifted to monthly DBT cycles in the 2010s to reduce leakages and ensure predictable income for vulnerable households. The state's practice of layering its own contribution over the central NSAP amount reflects a broader national trend of states augmenting federal welfare transfers to raise effective pension values.
The DBT mechanism routes funds electronically into beneficiaries' bank accounts, eliminating intermediaries. This architecture has been central to welfare delivery reform across Indian states over the past decade.
Stakeholders and Impact
The 97.84 lakh beneficiaries span three categories: elderly citizens, widows, and persons with disabilities — groups that have limited access to formal employment-linked social security. A monthly inflow of ₹1,100 provides a floor of predictable income in a state where a significant share of the population depends on agriculture and informal work.
The aggregate transfer of ₹1,423.94 crore in a single monthly cycle underscores the scale of Bihar's social protection commitment. For many beneficiaries, particularly in rural districts, this pension constitutes their primary or sole source of cash income.
What's Next
The government has anchored the 10th of every month as a fixed pension disbursement date, giving beneficiaries a predictable schedule. Observers will watch Bihar's state budget documents for any upward revision in the per-beneficiary pension amount and for periodic DBT performance reports that track coverage and disbursal timelines. Any expansion of the beneficiary list or increase in the monthly quantum would signal the administration's evolving social protection priorities ahead of the next budget cycle.