Government Notifies Revised Wage Rates under the VB–G RAM G Act, 2025

Here is the study note:


VB–G RAM G Act, 2025 — Revised Wage Rates Notified

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter MGNREGA (2005) VB–G RAM G (2025)
Days guaranteed 100 days/household/year 125 days/household/year [S3]
Minimum wage floor Varied; no universal floor ₹300 minimum across all states/UTs [S2]
Admin expenditure cap 6% 9% [S1]
Central:State funding (general) 90:10 60:40 [S3]
Central:State (NE/Himalayan states) 90:10 90:10 (retained) [S3]
Unemployment allowance trigger After 15 days After 15 days (retained) [S3]
Liability for unemployment allowance States States (retained) [S3]
Agricultural pause provision None Up to 60 days per year [S3]
Status of MGNREGA In force Repealed w.e.f. 1 July 2026 [S1]

Additional static facts: - Full name: Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) — VB–G RAM G (Hindi: विकसित भारत – जी राम जी) [S2] - Administering Ministry: Ministry of Rural Development [S2] - Eligible unit: Rural households (not individuals) - Work thematic areas (4): (1) Water security; (2) Core rural infrastructure; (3) Livelihood-related infrastructure; (4) Works to mitigate extreme weather events [S3] - Planning instrument: Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans replace earlier shelf-of-works approach [S1] - New governance body: National Level Steering Committee + state-level committees [S3] - Technology mandates: Biometric authentication, geospatial mapping, mobile dashboards, weekly public disclosures [S3] - Wage payment mode: Digital (direct to accounts)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. VB–G RAM G Act, 2025 replaces MGNREGA, 2005 with effect from 1 July 2026. [S1]
  2. Full form: Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin); Hindi name: विकसित भारत – जी राम जी. [S2]
  3. Administered by: Ministry of Rural Development (not Agriculture). [S2]
  4. Employment guarantee increased from 100 days to 125 days per rural household per year. [S3]
  5. No state/UT has a notified wage below ₹300 per day under the new notification. [S2]
  6. Average wage increase: over 10% across all states and UTs. [S2]
  7. States with 15%–25% increase: UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh. [S2]
  8. States with highest absolute wages (₹360–₹409): Kerala, Haryana, Punjab, Karnataka. [S2]
  9. Administrative expenditure ceiling raised from 6% to 9%. [S1]
  10. Funding ratio (general states) changed to 60% Centre : 40% State (was broadly 90:10 under MGNREGA). [S3]
  11. North-Eastern and Himalayan states retain 90:10 (Centre:State) funding ratio. [S3]
  12. Unemployment allowance becomes payable after 15 days of work not being provided; liability rests on States. [S3]
  13. States may notify an agricultural pause of up to 60 days per year during which works will not be undertaken. [S3]
  14. New planning instrument: Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans (replaces shelf-of-works). [S1]
  15. Bill passed by both Houses on 18 December 2025 — same date in Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; Centre-State relations; Panchayati Raj - GS-III: Inclusive growth; employment; poverty alleviation; effects of liberalisation on the economy

Syllabus headings: - Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population; performance of these schemes (GS-II) - Employment and poverty (GS-III) - Government budgeting (GS-III)

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The VB–G RAM G Act, 2025 represents a structural departure from MGNREGA's demand-driven model. Critically analyse the key changes and their implications for rural livelihoods and Centre-State fiscal relations." 2. "Universal wage floors and targeted hikes for historically low-wage states are central to the revised wage notification under VB–G RAM G Act, 2025. Discuss how this approach addresses equity concerns while posing new administrative challenges." 3. "Evaluate the shift from MGNREGA to VB–G RAM G as a case study in the evolution of India's rural employment guarantee architecture. What does this transition reveal about the changing philosophy of welfare in India?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
MGNREGA, 2005 — architecture & performance Direct predecessor; exam questions often require comparison
Panchayati Raj (Art. 243–243O & Schedules 11-12) Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans rest on devolution framework
Centre-State fiscal relations & Finance Commission New 60:40 funding ratio touches intergovernmental transfers
Right to Work as a Constitutional / Legal Concept Art. 21 jurisprudence, Directive Principles (Art. 41, 43)
Viksit Bharat 2047 — overall policy framework Act is explicitly positioned within this overarching vision
India's social security architecture PM-KISAN, PM-SVANidhi, PM-Awas Yojana — convergence themes
Minimum wage law in India — Code on Wages, 2019 Wage notification mechanisms; interaction with central floor wage
Digital Public Infrastructure in governance Biometric attendance, DBT, JAM Trinity — technology mandates in Act

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: MGNREGA and VB–G RAM G both belong to Ministry of Rural Development — NOT Agriculture & Farmers Welfare (PRS's bill page may list it differently due to a tracking error; PIB's press release is authoritative). [S2]
  2. Days guarantee: MGNREGA = 100 days; VB–G RAM G = 125 days — easy to mix up under exam pressure.
  3. Funding ratio: The new 60:40 (general states) is a reversal of the earlier generous central share; aspirants often assume the NE/Himalayan 90:10 is the universal norm — it is not.
  4. MGNREGA repealed vs. amended: The Act does not amend MGNREGA — it repeals it entirely. Any question framing it as an "amendment" is a trap.
  5. Wage floor of ₹300 vs. national minimum wage: ₹300 is the VB–G RAM G scheme floor, not the national floor wage under the Code on Wages, 2019 — these are separate legal instruments.

11. Sources