Kolkata: Across India, cash-transfer schemes for women have become one of the most powerful instruments of electoral politics and social welfare. Governments present them as direct, efficient and corruption-free support for households where a few thousand rupees can determine whether food, medicine or school expenses are paid on time. No serious observer can deny that such schemes need some verification. The state has a legitimate interest in checking identity, age, income, duplication and bank details before transferring public money to those who deserve it. But there is a point at which verification stops being welfare administration and becomes population surveillance. While replacing the previous Trinamool Congress government’s ‘Lakshmir Bhandar’ scheme, which provided a more modest Rs 1,500 to Rs 1,700, West Bengal’s new BJP government has doubled the financial incentive with its Annapurna Yojana. But in doing so, it appears to cross the line.The concern surrounding Bengal’s Annapurna Yojana is not the government’s mandate to verify beneficiaries before disbursing public funds. Any government can and should do this. The issue lies in the scheme’s data overreach. Why should a welfare form for a women’s cash-transfer scheme need to know so much more than the identity, income, residence and bank details of the beneficiary?The official state portal hosts the Annapurna Yojana form and states that the content, data, process and operation are owned and maintained by the government of West Bengal. The form is titled ‘Family Level Data Collection Form for Annapurna Yojana’. It says that filling up all the fields is mandatory. It predictably asks for ordinary welfare indicators such as name, date of birth, gender, address, Aadhaar, ration-card details, income indicators and bank accounts. It then goes much further, and seeks the Aadhaar details of all family members, bank accounts of the head of family and all adult members, EPIC numbers complete with assembly constituency and electoral-roll part numbers, alongside permanent account numbers (PAN) and Goods and Services Tax (GST) registrations, landholding sizes, detailed vehicular ownership, health insurance premiums, and the specific employment categories of the entire household. It probes into the lives of children, mandating vaccination statuses and the exact type of school they attend, with separate, highly specific checkboxes for recognised and unrecognised madrasas. The form is 10 pages in English and 12 in Bengali.Most alarming are two fields that have no obvious connection to the logistical delivery of Rs 3,000 into a beneficiary’s bank account – a beneficiary’s application status under the Citizenship Amendment Act and whether a person deleted in the special intensive revision of electoral rolls in 2026 has a case pending in a tribunal. To The Wire, state minister Agnimitra Paul had earlier said that women will be eligible for money under the Annapurna Yojana irrespective of their pending CAA status and SIR inclusion. Paul has been reached out to for comments on the new form. This report will be updated if and when she responds.A comparative study with similar schemesWhen contextualised against similar women-centric cash transfer schemes implemented by BJP-led or BJP-allied governments in other states, the Annapurna Yojana stands as a glaring anomaly. Social welfare programs in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra are certainly not free from surveillance concerns, but they operate within a recognisable, legally defensible benefits logic. Madhya Pradesh’s Mukhyamantri Ladli Behna Yojana utilises the Samagra family ID, Aadhaar, mobile number, e-KYC, the applicant’s own bank account, Aadhaar-linking and DBT activation to establish identity and prevent duplication. It filters out households with income-tax payers or government employees. Maharashtra’s Majhi Ladki Bahin scheme, too, has relied on Aadhaar and e-KYC-driven income, residence and bank validation. The BJP-led government there reportedly removed nearly 69 lakh names after an e-KYC and document verification drive. While these systems are intrusive, they fundamentally stop at assessing economic eligibility. The closest structural precedent to Bengal bringing electoral and citizenship markers directly into the welfare matrix is not a cash scheme but a family identity registry. Haryana’s Parivar Pehchan Patra assigns a family ID and is used to create a database for welfare delivery. Past instances have shown how such linked systems can misfire, including cases where people were algorithmically marked dead and lost pensions. This structural shift carries far-reaching consequences, exposing the severe risks of allowing a centralised family database to act as the gatekeeper for public entitlements. In such an ecosystem, a localised data anomaly transcends from being an isolated mistake into something that affects the entire welfare network, leading to systemic disenfranchisement.The Annapurna Yojana form introduces this vulnerability to West Bengal. By Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari’s own public admission, the exhaustive family details being harvested are intended to govern eligibility not just for this specific cash transfer, but across multiple state schemes. Consequently, a single administrative failure or unresolved data flag could sever a household from the full social safety net.The political context makes the form even more serious. According to official data, around 2.2 crore women were existing Lakshmir Bhandar beneficiaries. The new government indicated that about 30 lakhs will be ineligible in the transition. The number indicates that Chief Minister Adhikari has therefore linked ineligibility to the names which were deleted from the voter list or who have not applied to be included through an SIR-linked tribunal.Comparison with Assam NRCThe Annapurna form invites comparison with the deeply contentious Assam National Register of Citizens (NRC). Though the two are not legally identical, a structural analysis reveals profound similarities. Assam’s NRC was an explicit, legally-mandated citizenship-verification exercise. Its official architecture required proof of presence in the 1951 NRC, electoral rolls up to the midnight of March 24, 1971, or other admissible pre-1971 documents, followed by proof of linkage to an ancestor through “List B” documents. It was retrospective and asked families to reach back through archival records, legacy data codes, land documents, birth certificates, electoral rolls and relationship proofs.Annapurna, conversely, is contemporary rather than archival, framed as social protection rather than citizenship verification. However, both systems turn the family unit into the core node of state legibility, both rely heavily on electoral records as a baseline for inclusion, and both create a treacherous documentary pathway where ordinary people must prove they fundamentally belong before receiving a civic entitlement. In many ways, the Annapurna model is administratively more powerful. While the Assam NRC looked backward, Annapurna looks sideways across the present, fusing multiple live databases. By linking Aadhaar, digital ration cards, EPIC numbers, PAN, GST, asset ownership, and CAA status, the state builds an inescapable digital panopticon. When a single form maps household composition, economic vulnerability, and citizenship status, it creates a ready-made database primed for future exclusions, targeted audits, and political profiling.Representative image of a line of people waiting to check if they have been included in the NRC in Assam. Photo: PTIThe post-SIR realityThe scheme arrives in the immediate wake of the Election Commission of India’s special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in 2026, an aggressive purge that resulted in the deletion of roughly 91 lakh names in the state. While the Supreme Court upheld the ECI’s authority to conduct this revision, the judiciary explicitly underlined that the ECI cannot finally determine sovereign citizenship. Also read: Bengal SIR: What the Patterns of Exclusion for Muslim, Scheduled Caste and Urban Voters SayYet, by repurposing the SIR data as a primary gatekeeping filter for the Annapurna Yojana, the state government has effectively collapsed this vital judicial distinction in everyday life. When placed within the state’s wider political climate, these developments become more unsettling.The same government has concurrently announced a ‘detect, delete, and deport’ policy for alleged illegal immigrants and directed the establishment of holding centres for suspected foreigners awaiting repatriation. In isolation, an exhaustive welfare form might be dismissed as mere administrative overreach. However, when combined with SIR deletions, CAA-linked exceptions, tribunal mandates, and a formalised deportation framework, it operates as a structured pipeline of disenfranchisement.The Annapurna form avoids explicitly asking for religion, but by combining caste categories, CAA status, SIR deletions, and specific queries about children attending madrasas, it generates powerful indirect inferences about community identity. Ultimately, a poor woman filling out this expansive dossier for a Rs 3,000 lifeline is not offering meaningful consent to a sweeping demographic intelligence operation. She is complying because the alternative is losing her economic freedom and, in many cases, facing hunger. The most alarming reality of the Annapurna Yojana is that the precursor to structural disenfranchisement does not need to arrive as a highly debated or formal NRC. It can arrive quietly as a lucrative cash scheme and an exhaustive mandatory form, a silent administrative rule dictating that those flagged by automated electoral machinery must now legally prove their right to belong before the state will support them.