Maharashtra scraps free saree scheme for 25 lakh Antyodaya families

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Maharashtra scraps free saree scheme for 25 lakh Antyodaya families

Synopsis

Maharashtra has permanently cancelled its free saree scheme for 25 lakh Antyodaya families, effective immediately, with no Diwali distribution in 2025. The move — coming days after 92 lakh women were dropped from another flagship scheme — signals a sharp fiscal retreat from pre-election welfare promises, as the state stares down a ₹11.02 lakh crore debt load.

Key Takeaways

The Maharashtra government permanently cancelled the Captive Market Scheme (free saree scheme) via a Government Resolution on 16 July 2025 .
The scheme had served 25 lakh Antyodaya ration cardholders with one free powerloom saree annually, distributed at Diwali .
The government had spent ₹100 crore per year on the scheme, which ran for three years (2023–2025) .
No saree distribution will take place during Diwali 2025 .
Maharashtra's outstanding debt is projected to reach ₹11.02 lakh crore in 2026–27 , with a fiscal deficit of ₹1,50,491 crore .
The cancellation follows the deletion of 92 lakh women's names from the Mukhyamantri Majhi Ladki Bahin Yojana .

The Maharashtra government has permanently shut down the Captive Market Scheme — popularly known as the free saree scheme — which annually distributed powerloom-woven sarees to 25 lakh Antyodaya ration cardholders across the state. The Department of Textiles issued an official Government Resolution (GR) to this effect on Thursday, 16 July 2025, citing unsustainable financial burden as the primary reason for the rollback.

What the Scheme Was

Launched in June 2023 by then Chief Minister Eknath Shinde under the state's Integrated and Sustainable Textile Policy 2023–28, the scheme had a dual mandate: provide free clothing assistance to economically disadvantaged families holding Antyodaya ration cards, and simultaneously bolster the struggling powerloom sector. The government had earmarked ₹100 crore annually for the procurement of 25 lakh sarees, which were traditionally distributed during the Diwali festival. The scheme ran for three consecutive years2023, 2024, and 2025.

Why the Government Pulled the Plug

The official GR was explicit in its reasoning. 'Taking into overall consideration the financial assistance provided to various sectors, the projected financial burden of proposed schemes, and the government's other fiscal liabilities, it would not be viable to continue this scheme into the next financial year,' the order stated. The closure comes against the backdrop of a severely strained state fiscal position. In the Budget for 2026–27 presented in March, the government projected a revenue deficit of ₹40,552 crore and a fiscal deficit of ₹1,50,491 crore. Maharashtra's outstanding debt is estimated to rise to ₹11.02 lakh crore in 2026–27, up from ₹9.73 lakh crore in the revised estimates for 2025–26.

The Wider Fiscal Context

The termination follows the Maharashtra government tabling supplementary demands worth ₹97,706.40 crore in the Legislative Assembly on the first day of the monsoon session on 22 June. Notably, this scheme cancellation is not an isolated move — it comes close on the heels of the deletion of 92 lakh women's names from the Mukhyamantri Majhi Ladki Bahin Yojana, another flagship welfare initiative. Together, the two rollbacks mark a significant retreat from welfare commitments made ahead of the 2024 assembly elections.

Impact on Beneficiaries

With the scheme now officially terminated, officials have confirmed that no saree distribution will take place during Diwali 2025 — the first such absence in three years. The 25 lakh Antyodaya families who depended on the annual distribution will not receive any replacement benefit under the current framework. Critics argue the rollback disproportionately affects the state's most economically vulnerable women, who were the scheme's sole intended recipients.

What Happens Next

The government has not announced any alternative clothing assistance programme or compensatory measure for affected families. With Maharashtra's debt load rising and multiple welfare commitments under fiscal review, further rationalisation of state schemes cannot be ruled out, according to budget analysts.

Point of View

The pattern suggests that pre-election welfare commitments are the first casualty of Maharashtra's deepening fiscal crisis. The state's debt trajectory — heading toward ₹11 lakh crore — was predictable even when these schemes were announced in 2023; the question is why beneficiaries are absorbing the correction rather than procurement or administrative costs. With no replacement programme announced, the government is effectively asking the most economically vulnerable women in the state to bear the cost of fiscal overextension.
NationPress
17 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What was Maharashtra's free saree scheme?
The Captive Market Scheme, launched in June 2023 under then Chief Minister Eknath Shinde, distributed one free powerloom-woven saree annually to families holding Antyodaya ration cards. The government spent ₹100 crore per year to procure 25 lakh sarees, distributed during Diwali.
Why has Maharashtra cancelled the free saree scheme?
The state government cited severe financial constraints, stating in its official Government Resolution that the projected financial burden of proposed schemes and existing fiscal liabilities made it 'not viable' to continue. Maharashtra faces a fiscal deficit of ₹1,50,491 crore and debt estimated at ₹11.02 lakh crore in 2026–27.
Who is affected by the scheme's cancellation?
Approximately 25 lakh Antyodaya ration card-holding families across Maharashtra — the state's most economically disadvantaged households — will no longer receive the annual saree. There is no replacement benefit currently announced.
Will there be a saree distribution during Diwali 2025?
No. Officials have confirmed that Diwali 2025 will see no saree distribution, marking the first year since 2023 that the benefit will not be provided.
How does this relate to the Mukhyamantri Majhi Ladki Bahin Yojana controversy?
The scheme cancellation follows the recent deletion of 92 lakh women's names from the Mukhyamantri Majhi Ladki Bahin Yojana, another major welfare initiative. Together, the two rollbacks represent a significant scaling back of welfare commitments made ahead of the 2024 Maharashtra assembly elections.
Nation Press
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