Scheming
against the poor-MGNREGA
BY
T. K. RAJALAKSHMI
The Left and
other national parties protest against the NDA government’s attempts to dilute
the MGNREGS by
limiting its budget and reducing its reach. By T.K. RAJALAKSHMI
IN a rare
show of solidarity, representatives of several political parties took issue
with the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic
Alliance (NDA) government on its controversial proposal to restructure the
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment
Guarantee
Scheme (MGNREGS). The opposition, which was initially confined to the Left
parties and hence muted both in the media and in the
Budget and monsoon sessions of Parliament, got an unexpected fillip when other
parties joined in. In the ongoing winter
session, the
objections acquired a cogent shape, especially on three aspects: reduction in
the budgeted allocation to the MGNREGS as opposed to
the projected demand, dilution of the labour-material ratio from 60:40 to 51:49
without a commensurate increase in the
overall
funds, and reduction in the coverage from 6,576 blocks to 2,500 blocks. The
Budget provision was enhanced only by Rs.1,000 crore—it was
Rs.33,000 crore in 2013-14 and for the current fiscal (2014-15), it is
Rs.34,000 crore. Responding to
a calling attention motion in the Rajya Sabha on November 27, Rural Development
Minister Birender Singh said that the MGNREGA was
enacted in 2005 with the aim of enhancing the livelihood security of
households. One of its “primary goals is also to create
durable assets and strengthen the livelihood base of the rural poor”, he said.
The Minister
further stated that the government had notified that 60 per cent of the works
to be taken up in a district in terms of cost would be for
the creation of productive assets directly linked to agricultural and allied
activities through development of land, water
and tree
cover. He declared that the convergence of the MGNREGS with the schemes of
other departments was being encouraged to promote
quality asset creation. He said the wage-material ratio for works taken up by
agencies other than gram panchayats would be
counted at
the district level instead of the block level to facilitate the creation of
more durable assets. He admitted that the Act had achieved
significant results in the past eight years. Around five crore households were
provided employment each year (29 per cent of
the total
rural households); 54 per cent of the beneficiaries were women and close to 40
per cent were from the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled
Tribes. Citing the
performance audit of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India as
recording that 90 per cent of the beneficiaries were either
casual labourers or small or marginal farmers, he said the scheme had a
positive impact on agricultural production and productivity.
In the past eight years, he said, nearly 70 per cent of the total expenditure,
or Rs.1,80,000 crore, was paid as wages. But he made it
clear that the “current focus of the government was to ensure both wage
employment generation and creation of quality assets” and
that the list of permissible works was expanded.
“Expensive failure”
Attempts to
downplay the significance of the MGNREGS and to portray it as a white elephant
have been under way. The scheme’s critics argue
that it has reduced the availability of labour for agricultural works (the
Union Minister mentioned that landlords were
affected),
has not created productive assets, and is marred by corruption. In fact, Union
Minister for Women and Child Development Maneka Gandhi
described the scheme as the most “expensive failure” which made agricultural
labour unavailabile and destroyed
cultural
patterns by affecting, among other things, the carpet and silk-weaving industry
in Varanasi. This view is not shared by several State
governments. Several parties and State governments are increasingly throwing
their weight behind the scheme. The show of solidarity has extended from
Parliament to State Assemblies and even to the streets.
State
Assemblies in Jharkhand, Telangana, Tripura and West Bengal have adopted joint
resolutions against the Centre’s moves. In West Bengal,
the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the opposition Communist Party of India
(Marxist) and the Congress joined
hands to
propose and pass a resolution decrying the efforts of the BJP government to
dilute, truncate and limit the budget for the scheme.
The Centre
released a note in September 2014 quoting some studies that questioned the
efficacy of the MGNREGS as a poverty alleviation
programme. The note fundamentally ignored the fact that the MGNREGS was not an
asset creating and guaranteeing
scheme but an
employment guarantee scheme. The note quotes a study of sustainable livelihood
models from Jharkhand done by a Prime
Minister’s Rural Development Fellow (an initiative of the United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) II government), which says that
“the scheme
is not solving its real purpose, i.e., to contribute to poverty reduction at
the village level through sustained livelihood generation
resources. The objective has reduced to fill muster rolls with more and more
days of employment [sic].”
It also cites
another study by a University of Michigan scholar that says: “The results
suggest that the overall direct effects on the labour market
are small… given the large size of a programme such as the NREGS with
expenditures of about 1 per cent of Indian GDP [gross
domestic product], the results raise the question whether the provided welfare
benefits are large enough to warrant the existence of
such an ambitious scheme, at least in its current form or whether the money
would be more efficiently spent on other antipoverty measures.”
The note says
that “in spite of clear evidence of rampant corruption at various places, the
scheme continues to be presented as a successful scheme.
This, perhaps, is due to a solid network of vested interests involving
political party functionaries, government
officials,
NGOs, research institutes and experts desirous of milking the scheme to their
advantages [sic].” It quotes a study from Rajasthan,
which contends that the Congress benefited from the scheme and that the vote
share of the Congress increased in areas
where the
funds allocated were more.
A study from
Andhra Pradesh says that there was “consistent evidence that the distribution
of funds after the elections was politically motivated,
either as a patronage effect following the 2009 election or as a vote buying
effect leading up to the byelection in 2012 or full election in
2014. Moreover, we find evidence that aggregate MGNREGS spending in the
pre-2009 election years is positively related to a shift in
the voting patterns towards the UPA coalition in 2009, implying that voters
‘rewarded’ the governing coalition for the well targeted nature of the
programme in the initial years, evidence that overt voting buying was
unnecessary to secure their win.” Increased
spending by UPA-I (2004-09), primarily under the pressure of the Left parties,
which were supporting the coalition from outside, was
seen as one of the factors instrumental in the re-election of the coalition in
2009. Also, the
reduced budgetary allocation and the backlog of payments, including non-payment
of unemployment allowance in several States, among
other factors, resulted in the Congress’ debacle in 2014. It was no surprise then
that Mani Shankar Aiyar, Congress Member of
Parliament, supported the public protest organised by the CPI(M) in New Delhi
on November 26 against the dilution of the scheme. His
colleague and former Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh demanded clarifications
from the Union Minister on the move to
restrict the number of blocks for coverage. The other parties which criticised
the government were the Janata Dal (United), the TMC and
the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam.
Unrelenting government
The Ministry
for Rural Development, first under Nitin Gadkari and now under Birender Singh,
is in no mood to relent. The government is convinced
that over the years the MGNREGS has effectively blocked the procurement and use
of machinery and use of skilled labour for creating
assets such as large check dams and minor irrigation dams. The September note
selectively mentions a CAG report’s observation
that most of the works related to temporary earth fills and levelling of land
which were washed out in the rains and were not “objectively
measurable”. It also argues that most of the Lok Sabha MPs had either demanded
scrapping of the scheme or creating measurable
assets. D. Raja,
Rajya Sabha member from the Communist Party of India, denied that there was
consensus in the Lok Sabha on this issue.
A circular of
the Rural Development Ministry dated July 21, 2014, stated that attention would
be paid to backward blocks while conducting
the labour budgeting exercise along with the State governments. Budgetary
allocation is conventionally decided by the State
governments,
after consultation with the Centre, as the MGNREGS is essentially a
demand-driven programme. P. Rajeeve,
CPI(M) member in the Rajya Sabha, pointed out that the Intensive Participatory
Planning Exercise was launched only in 2,500 blocks,
which was much less than the total number of blocks (6,576) classified as
backward by the Planning Commission. He said the
government calculated the labour budget at Rs.61,200 crore for 2014-15 but the
funds allocated were half of that. In 2013-14, the payable
unemployment allowance was around Rs.2,923.80 crore but not a single rupee was
paid to any worker under this head. Birender
Singh refused to give a clear reply to the members’ questions on reduced
coverage under the scheme. Om Parkash
Palati, a former office-bearer of the All India Agricultural Workers Union in
Hisar district of Haryana, said: “The MGNREGS
provides 100 days of work a year and agricultural work is for around three
months a year. Now is the time to give employment
under the scheme. Agricultural work has ceased. We should get MGNREGS work when
agricultural work is not available but the
panchayats always release works for the scheme during the harvest and
cultivation seasons. That is one reason why there is shortage of
labour for agricultural operations as people prefer to take up MGNREGS works as
it guarantees wages and their selfrespect.
In the lean
agricultural months, we do not actually get any work. That is the time when
they should release work under the scheme. The worker
is sitting idle now. The poor seek work all year round. They would like to do
both normal agricultural work as well as MGNREGS
work. It is not true that there is a labour shortage for work.” He said the
panchayat could sanction pucca work (long-term assets) such as planting and
grooming of trees all through the year. “It is environment
friendly too and people can be employed for longer durations. Other works that
could be considered are laying of village roads and
cleaning of canals, works that are required to be done on a regular basis. But
panchayats use machines to lay roads and dredge
canals, and that is the reason for unemployment. We get beaten up for demanding
to know what works had been sanctioned,” he said. According to
him, one Dilbagh was beaten up at Mojahadpur village in Hansi tehsil for making
an application under the Right to Information
Act demanding to know what works were sanctioned by the village panchayat. There is a
great demand for work even in the so-called better-off States. Clearly, MGNREGS
works may not have had a spectacular effect on the
lives of the rural people but they have had several positive outcomes, one of
them being guaranteed wage work and a degree of
reduced dependence on the landed. At the time of the enactment of the MGNREGA,
the Left parties had demanded an employment
guarantee scheme for the urban poor. Ironically, even the scheme for the rural
poor seems to be under threat.
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