Playing hide and seek on employment guarantee


Playing Hide and Seek on Employment Guarantee

UPSC Study Note — Prelims + Mains | GS-II / GS-III


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2004 UPA election manifesto commits to employment guarantee legislation
2005 MGNREGA enacted (National Rural Employment Guarantee Act); renamed to include "Mahatma Gandhi" in 2009
2006-07 Scheme launched in 200 districts; budget ₹11,300 crore [S2]
2008 Extended to all rural districts of India
2013-14 Budget reaches ₹33,000 crore; cumulative person-days 1,660 crore (2006–07 to 2013–14) [S2]
2014-15 onward Cumulative person-days 2,923 crore (2014–15 to 2024–25), exceeding entire previous decade [S2]
2024-25 ₹86,000 crore allocated — highest-ever at Budget Estimate stage since inception [S3]
2025-26 Allocation retained at ₹86,000 crore [S3]
2026 VB-G RAM G Act proposed; debate over whether it weakens or strengthens the guarantee [S4]

Predecessor: National Food for Work Programme (2004); Employment Assurance Scheme (1993).


4. Core Static Facts

MGNREGA - Full name: Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development - Type: Demand-driven, rights-based (legal entitlement, not a scheme) - Entitlement: Minimum 100 days guaranteed wage employment per household per year [S1] - Eligible workers: Adult members of rural households willing to do unskilled manual work - Wage payment: >96% of Fund Transfer Orders (FTOs) generated within 15 days of muster roll closure in the last 5 years [S1] - Registered households (FY 2024-25): 15.99 crore [S2] - Person-days generated (FY 2024-25): 290.60 crore [S2] - Budget (FY 2024-25 & 2025-26): ₹86,000 crore each [S3] - Social audit: Mandatory under Section 17 of MGNREGA - Ombudsman: Provided under Section 27 for grievance redress

VB-G RAM G Act (proposed) - Full name: Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act - Claimed entitlement: 125 days per household per year - Key controversy: Section 5(1) — guarantee applies only in areas notified by the Central government, creating administrative discretion [S4] - Critical distinction from MGNREGA: MGNREGA's guarantee is universal across all rural areas; VB-G RAM G Act's guarantee is geographically conditional


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. MGNREGA was enacted in 2005 and came into force initially in 200 districts. [S2]
  2. The Act mandates a minimum of 100 days of guaranteed wage employment per rural household per year. [S1]
  3. Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development (not Ministry of Labour). [S1]
  4. Women must constitute at least one-third (33%) of MGNREGA beneficiaries under the Act.
  5. If work is not provided within 15 days, the state government is liable to pay an unemployment allowance (Section 7). [S1]
  6. Social audit of MGNREGA works is mandatory under Section 17 of the Act.
  7. Section 27 of MGNREGA provides for appointment of an Ombudsman for grievance redress.
  8. MGNREGA budget for FY 2024-25 was ₹86,000 crore — highest-ever Budget Estimate since inception. [S3]
  9. Cumulative person-days from FY 2014-15 to 2024-25: 2,923 crore, versus 1,660 crore in the preceding 8 years. [S2]
  10. Section 5(1) of the proposed VB-G RAM G Act restricts the employment guarantee to areas notified by the Central government — the critical "switch-off" clause. [S4]
  11. The VB-G RAM G Act proposes 125 days of employment per household (vs. 100 days under MGNREGA). [S4]
  12. MGNREGA was preceded at the national level by the Employment Assurance Scheme (1993) and the National Food for Work Programme (2004).
  13. More than 96% of FTOs under MGNREGA are generated within 15 days of muster roll closure. [S1]
  14. Gram Panchayats are the principal implementing agencies and must execute at least 50% of works by cost under MGNREGA.
  15. India's model drew from Maharashtra's Employment Guarantee Scheme (1977) — the world's first statutory employment guarantee.

8. Mains Relevance

Dimension Detail
GS-II Social sector/welfare schemes; Mechanisms for welfare of vulnerable sections; Federalism
GS-III Indian economy; Employment; Government budgeting; Rural development
GS-IV Ethics in public policy; transparency; accountability of government

Syllabus headings: - GS-II: "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes" - GS-III: "Effects of liberalisation on the economy, employment"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The proposed VB-G RAM G Act claims to enhance MGNREGA's employment guarantee to 125 days but critics argue it fundamentally weakens the rights-based framework. Critically evaluate." (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 2. "Employment guarantee schemes must balance fiscal prudence with social rights. Discuss the tension between statutory entitlements and administrative discretion with reference to MGNREGA." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Examine the role of MGNREGA as an automatic economic stabiliser in rural India, with evidence from budget trends and person-days generated data." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PM-KISAN & Direct Benefit Transfers Competing model of rural welfare; scheme-based vs. rights-based transfer
Maharashtra Employment Guarantee Scheme (1977) Historical precursor; comparative welfare policy
ILO Social Protection Floors (Recommendation 202, 2012) International normative standard against which MGNREGA is benchmarked
Directive Principles of State Policy (Arts. 39–43) Constitutional basis for employment-linked welfare legislation
Fiscal Federalism & Rural Development Finance State share in MGNREGA funding; Centre-State fiscal relations
Right to Work as a Fundamental Right Legal debates; SR Bommai case; Article 21 jurisprudence
Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana – Gramin (PMAY-G) Companion scheme implemented through same rural development machinery
Wage Policy in India (Minimum Wages Act → Code on Wages, 2019) MGNREGA wage revision linked to CPI-AL; gap with state minimum wages

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: MGNREGA is under Ministry of Rural Development, not Ministry of Labour & Employment — both deal with employment; UPSC has tested this.
  2. 100 vs. 125 days: MGNREGA guarantees 100 days; VB-G RAM G Act proposes 125 days — but this increase is conditional on Section 5(1) notification; don't treat the 125-day figure as unconditional.
  3. Scheme vs. Act: MGNREGA is a statute (Act of Parliament), not a scheme — this means entitlements are legal rights, not administrative grants. Confusing it with PM-KISAN (which is a scheme) leads to wrong answers on the nature of obligations.
  4. Unemployment allowance liability: Many aspirants forget that under MGNREGA, the state government (not the Centre) pays the unemployment allowance — this tests knowledge of federal cost-sharing.
  5. Social audit under Section 17: Commonly confused with Right to Information or CAG audit. MGNREGA's social audit is community-led and mandated specifically under Section 17 of the Act itself.

11. Sources