Workers hit as MGNREGS jobs dry up


MGNREGS Jobs Dry Up — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2005 NREGA enacted — Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 passed by Parliament
2006 Implemented in 200 of the most backward districts in Phase I
2007–08 Extended to 330 additional districts (Phase II)
2008 Extended to all rural districts of India (Phase III)
2009 Renamed MGNREGA/MGNREGS in honour of Mahatma Gandhi
2013–14 Women's participation: ~48%
2020–21 COVID-19 reverse migration surge: person-days peaked as migrant workers returned to villages
2024–25 290.60 crore person-days generated; 15.99 crore households registered [S1]
2025–26 Allocation retained at ₹86,000 crore — highest since inception [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Scheme Basics - Full name: Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) - Act: Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 - Guarantee: 100 days of unskilled manual work per rural household per year [S3] - Unemployment allowance: Mandatory if work not provided within 15 days of application [S3] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India - Implementation: State governments / State Rural Employment Guarantee Councils / Gram Panchayats at grassroots

Financial Facts - FY 2025–26 Budget: ₹86,000 crore (highest ever allocation) [S1] - Wage revision basis: Consumer Price Index – Agricultural Labourers (CPI-AL), revised annually [S2] - Wages notified by Central Government but vary by state - Recommended wage (expert committee): ₹375/day (current rates fall short in many states) [S2]

Scale - Registered households (FY 2024–25): 15.99 crore [S1] - Person-days generated (FY 2024–25): 290.60 crore [S1] - Women's participation (FY 2024–25): 58.15% (up from 48% in 2013–14) [S1] - Households offered work (FY 2025–26): 99.79% of those who demanded [S1]

Payment System - Wages disbursed via Aadhaar-Based Payment System (ABPS) — direct bank/post office transfer [S5] - Wage payment legally mandated within 15 days of closure of muster rolls [S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. MGNREGA enacted in 2005; renamed with "Mahatma Gandhi" prefix in 2009. [S3]
  2. Guarantees 100 days of unskilled manual work per rural household (not individual) per year. [S3]
  3. Implementing ministry: Ministry of Rural Development (not Ministry of Labour). [S3]
  4. Unemployment allowance is mandatory if work not provided within 15 days — funded by State government (not Centre). [S3]
  5. Budget allocation for FY 2025–26: ₹86,000 crore — highest since scheme inception. [S1]
  6. Wage revision index: CPI-AL (Consumer Price Index – Agricultural Labourers), revised annually. [S2]
  7. Expert committee recommended MGNREGA wage of ₹375/day; current rates vary by state and fall short in most. [S2]
  8. Women's participation in FY 2024–25: 58.15% (rose from 48% in FY 2013–14). [S1]
  9. Total person-days generated in FY 2024–25: 290.60 crore. [S1]
  10. Social audit of MGNREGA works is mandated under Section 17 of the Act. [S3]
  11. Wage payment must be made within 15 days of closure of muster rolls; delay triggers 0.05% per day compensation. [S3]
  12. Aadhaar-Based Payment System (ABPS) is the primary disbursement mode — exclusion of workers with authentication failures is a documented risk. [S5]
  13. MGNREGA's Schedule I lists permissible works; Schedule II lists workers' rights. [S3]
  14. In Muzaffarpur, Bihar, approximately 12,000 workers protested for 87 days over non-provision of work (March 2026). [S4]
  15. MGNREGA is a demand-driven programme — the government must provide work upon demand, not on a fixed supply quota. [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development; welfare schemes for vulnerable sections
GS-III Inclusive growth; employment; rural development; direct benefit transfer
GS-II Issues relating to poverty and hunger; federalism in scheme implementation

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "MGNREGS represents a legal entitlement that is more promise than delivery." Critically examine the structural and administrative bottlenecks preventing effective implementation of MGNREGS, with reference to recent worker protests. (GS-II/III, 15 marks)

  2. Analyse the discrepancy between aggregate MGNREGS statistics (99%+ households offered work) and ground-level reports of work denial. What reforms in fund flow, wage fixation, and technology use can bridge this gap? (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. The wages under MGNREGA are not linked to the national minimum wage floor under the Code on Wages, 2019. Examine the implications of this disconnect for rural workers and suggest corrective measures. (GS-II/III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Code on Wages, 2019 MGNREGA wages are divorced from this national minimum wage framework — a key reform debate
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) & Aadhaar ABPS is the payment backbone; exclusion errors and coverage gaps are directly linked
Rural Poverty & SECC Data MGNREGA targeting draws on Socio-Economic Caste Census; understanding beneficiary identification is essential
Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana – Gramin (PMAY-G) Often converged with MGNREGA for labour component; tests knowledge of scheme convergence
Social Audit (CAG & community audits) Section 17 of MGNREGA mandates social audit — connects to accountability and governance
National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP) Companion rural welfare scheme; both target the same vulnerable population
Fiscal Federalism & Centrally Sponsored Schemes MGNREGA cost-sharing (Centre–State split: 90:10 for most components) is a federalism flashpoint
15th Finance Commission Recommendations Tied grants and rural local bodies' fiscal capacity directly affect MGNREGA delivery

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: MGNREGS is under Ministry of Rural Development, NOT Ministry of Labour & Employment — frequently confused.
  2. Individual vs. Household guarantee: The 100-day guarantee is per household, not per worker — MCQs often test this.
  3. Unemployment allowance funder: Paid by State government (not Centre) when work is not provided within 15 days — a critical statutory distinction under Schedule II.
  4. MGNREGA vs. NFSA: Both are rights-based statutes from UPA era; don't conflate — MGNREGA (2005) is employment; NFSA (2013) is food security.
  5. Wage revision index: Uses CPI-AL, not CPI-Rural or WPI — the specific index is a standard MCQ trap.
  6. "Demand-driven" claim vs. reality: Prelims options sometimes frame MGNREGA as supply-driven; it is constitutionally and statutorily demand-driven — though fund shortfalls create de facto supply constraints.

11. Sources