New Delhi, October 2022.
Dalberg, a leading social impact advisory group today
released an extensive study on “The state of rural employment: A look at
MGNREGS across 5 states in India”. The research attempts to provide
comprehensive evidence on how the world’s largest employment guarantee program
is faring for millions of low-income households who rely on this key social
protection measure. It focuses on understanding the gaps that exist in the
scheme’s on-ground implementation, to recommend ways in which these might be
bridged to improve delivery of benefits to intended beneficiaries. The study
was supported by Omidyar Network India,
an investment firm focused on impact.
The
research focused on five states namely Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand, Karnataka,
Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh which accounted for more than one-third of all
employment provided within the scheme and have over 40% of registered MGNREGS
workers in the country. Along with understanding beneficiaries' experience with
MGNREGS, the report is among the first to spotlight challenges and perspectives
of local administrators that can be useful for long term policy action and
implementing immediate solutions at the frontline.
The
study found that although MGNREGS has been a strong rail for rural Indian
households during the COVID-19 pandemic, critical gaps continued to undermine
the scheme’s welfare potential:
·
Enrollment - 47% of low-income households had at least one active job card. 29%
of adults in rural areas did not have an active job card but wanted to get one.
Of these, 72% of them belonged to households that did not have a job card at
all.
·
Application for employment – 70%of job card holderswanted employment under
MGNREGS at least once. 18% of them were unable to submit their job application
dueto perceived discrimination and high transaction costs (e.g., making
multiple visits to the Gram Panchayat).
·
Getting work - All households that applied for work under MGNREGS received some
work;households demanded an average of 95 days of employment (against an
entitlement of 100 days) and received, on average,66 days of employment.
·
Getting wages -95% of job card holders who received MGNREGS employment in the last year
had received wages for their most recent employment. 37% of job card holders
who received employment reported being paid on time.
·
Grievance redressal - 20% of job card holders had a grievance related to work allocation or
payment of wages, and 91% sought redressal; more than half received partial to full
resolution.
·
Experience of women – Womenmake up a key beneficiary group for the scheme. However, 6% of the
women with job cardsreported having tried to apply for employment without
success as no work was available for them. Further, 26% of the womenwho wanted MGNREGS workbut could not apply cited
a lack of understanding of the application process as the reason for being
unsuccessful.
The
study also highlighted lack of adequate staff on the administrative front at
the Gram Panchayats and technical skills to seamlessly implement MGNREGS:
·
There was more demand for MGNREGS than was being registered;41% of
administrators stopped accepting applications for employment after the year’s
labor budget was exhausted.
·
Employment demand surveys were carried out in only 79% of Gram Panchayats and work
planning was less frequent in others.
·
Capacity to support timely wage payments was limited as many Gram
Panchayats had insufficient technical staff to complete work verification and
measurement
·
39% of local administrators were unable to resolve beneficiary challenges
concerning payment of wages among other issues mostly because they lacked
authority to do so. 28% also reported that they did not possess grievance
redressal mechanisms.
“MGNREGS has been transformational
for livelihood security in rural India, especially through Covid-19 where it
served as a critical lifeline for millions of low-income households. Our study
underscores the well-documented need to increase the availability of work,
especially for women who continue to be disproportionately left out and too
often experience discrimination when they try to obtain work through the
scheme. We find that a few critical process improvements—to the application
process in recording demand, and work planning — could have an outsized role in
meeting the demand for MGNREGS work and delivering it more effectively. These
changes offer an opportunity to further deepen the impact of one of India’s
most important social protection schemes.” – said Swetha Totapally, Partner, Dalberg
Advisors.
“Given our focus on improving the lives of the Next
Half Billion by supporting tech-focused interventions, studies like this are
critical in surfacing evidence-based insights that can help stakeholders in
policy-making and capacity building. Digitisation and technical developments
have enabled faster and broader coverage of beneficiaries for various public
schemes in India. While there have been past studies on the impact of and
benefit of MGNREGS, this study aims to highlight simple and practical
modifications that can make the scheme even more inclusive and
accessible." said Shilpa Kumar, Partner, Omidyar Network India