Skip to main content

NREGA budget "illegally squeezed" 25% in '17-18, 30% in 16-17; Rs 80,000 cr needed in '18-19

 
India’s top advocacy group fighting for the workers employed under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, NREGA Sangharsh Morcha (NSM), has insisted that any budget less than Rs 80,000 crore would be “insufficient to meet even the projected demand for work timely payment of wages.”
In a statement, the advocacy group says, “As we await the budget allocations for FY 2018-19, NREGA is facing another monetary drought with liabilities for wage and material payments mounting every day.”
Calling it a “demand driven law, which means that money should be provided as per demand”, NSM has regretted not only “this is not happening”, the actual allocation of FY 2017-18 of Rs 48,500 crore “is long exhausted with expenditure having crossed Rs 50,000 crore, and more than two months still left.”
“While an increase in allocation for FY 18-19 is expected, the total amount required needs to be seen in context, not simply as an increased allocation”, NSM insists.
According to the advocacy group, “It is pertinent to recall that 25%, or close to Rs 12,000 crore out of the current ‘record’ allocation went to pay off last year’s dues. For FY 17-18, pending liabilities are already about Rs 5,000 crore and is bound to rise in the next two months.”
It adds, “The budget for FY 18-19 will have to deduct pending liabilities at the end of this year, to present a true picture of funds available for employment next year. Enough funds need to be made available to break this cycle of pending liabilities at the end of financial years. Only then can timely payment of wages actually be made.”
“As per sample independent studies”, NMS says, “The actual wages paid on time in 2017-18 is likely to be around 32% instead of the figure of 85% presented by the Government of India.”
It underlines, “Further increasing costs, both for wages and material need to be taken into account. NREGA wage rates need to be brought in line with State Minimum Wages as per constitutional values, and as various Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD) committees have recommended.”
“At the very least”, NMS believes, “Wages should be indexed to inflation as per the Consumer Price Index of Rural Labour (CPI-R).”
MNS points out, “The insufficient budgetary allocation results in the MoRD using various illegal and coercive methods to cut employment and squeeze expenditure on the NREGA, thereby violating various provisions of this act with impunity.”
MNS says, things began deteriorating after the NDA came to power in 2014, with several civil society groups starting to pointing out the pernicious manner in which funds were being squeezed for NREGA. An illegal concept called ‘approved labour budget’-- contrary to the spirit of the Act – was floated. Thus, “in FY 17-18, the projected labour budget was reduced by 25% from Rs 288 crore persondays to 215 crore persondays.”
“Calculated at an average cost per day of Rs 240, this amounts to huge deficits in the allocated amount”, says MNS, adding, “Moreover, funds are not made available to state governments for even the approved labour budget.”
Further, it says, the Government of India “has given itself further discretion to withhold funds to state governments by introducing mid-term reviews, internal audit reports and mother sanction order” that strongly undermine the Act.”

Comments

TRENDING

A conman, a demolition man: How 'prominent' scribes are defending Pritish Nandy

How to defend Pritish Nandy? That’s the big question some of his so-called fans seem to ponder, especially amidst sharp criticism of his alleged insensitivity during his journalistic career. One such incident involved the theft and publication of the birth certificate of Masaba Gupta, daughter of actor Neena Gupta, in the Illustrated Weekly of India, which Nandy was editing at the time. He reportedly did this to uncover the identity of Masaba’s father.

Whither Jeffrey Sachs-supported research project which 'created' Gujarat model of development for Modi?

Even as Donald Trump was swearing-in as US President, a friend forwarded to me a YouTube video in which veteran world renowned economist Prof Jeffrey Sachs participated and sought an answer as to why Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was "afraid to fly" despite being invited to Donald Trump's swearing in ceremony. This took my memory to 2003, when I -- as representative of the Times of India -- had a short tet-a-tat along with a couple of other reporters with Sachs in the chief minister's office in Gandhinagar.

No to free thought? How Gujarat's private universities are cowing down their students

"Don't protest"—that's the message private universities across Gujarat seem to be conveying to their students. A senior professor told me that students at the university where he teaches are required to sign an undertaking promising not to engage in protests. "They simply sign the undertaking and hand it over to the university authorities," he said.

Busy taking books to the needy, this rationalist exposes miracles in a superstition-infested Gujarat society

I knew his name as a campaigner against the sheer wastage of the large amounts of ghee brought by devotees from across India for a major religious ceremony conducted every year in Rupal village, near Gandhinagar, the Gujarat capital, on the ninth day of Navratri. I had seen him at several places during my visits to different NGO meetings as well as some media conferences.

'Potentially lethal, carcinogenic': Global NGO questions India refusing to ban white asbestos

Associated with the Fight Inequality Alliance, a global movement that began in 2016 to "counter the concentration of power and wealth among a small elite", claiming to have members  in the United Kingdom, South Africa, Kenya, Zambia, the Philippines, and Denmark, the advocacy group Confront Power appears all set to intensify its campaign against India as "the world’s largest asbestos importer". 

To be or not to be Sattvik: Different communities' differing notions of purity and fasting

This is a continuation of my last blog on Sattvik food. When talking about Sattvik, there is a tendency to overlook what it may mean to different sections of people around the world. First, let me redefine Sattvik: it means having a "serene, balanced, and harmonious mind or attitude." Derived from the Sanskrit word sattva, it variously means "pure, essence, nature, vital, energy, clean, conscious, strong, courage, true, honest, and wise." How do people achieve this so-called purity? Among Gujarati Hindus, especially those from the so-called upper castes who are vegetarians, one common way is fasting. On fasting days, such as agiyarash —the 11th day of the lunar cycle in the Vedic calendar—my close relatives fast but consume milk, fruit juices, mangoes, grapes, bananas, almonds, pistachios, and potato-based foods, including fried items. Another significant fasting period is adhik maas. During this time, many of my relatives "fast" by eating only a single me...

Beyond the Sattvik plate: Prof Anil Gupta's take on food, ethics, and sustainability

I was pleasantly surprised to receive a rather lengthy comment (I don't want to call it a rejoinder) on my blog post about the Sattvik Food Festival, held near the Sola Temple in Ahmedabad late last year. It came from no less a person than Anil Gupta, Professor Emeritus at the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIM-A), under whose guidance this annual event was held.

Would Gujarat Governor, govt 'open up' their premises for NGOs? Activists apprehensive

Soon after I uploaded my blog about the Gujarat Governor possibly softening his stance on NGOs—evidenced by allowing a fisherfolk association to address the media at a venue controlled by the Raj Bhawan about India’s alleged failure to repatriate fishermen from Pakistani prisons—one of the media conference organizers called me. He expressed concern that my blog might harm their efforts to secure permission to hold meetings on state premises.

Sattvik Food Festival: Shouldn't one question notion of purity, cultural exclusion in food choices?

Recently, I visited the Sattvik Food Festival, an annual event in Ahmedabad organized by Anil Gupta, professor emeritus at the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIM-A). I have known Prof. Gupta since 1993, when I sought an appointment to meet him a few months after joining The Times of India in Ahmedabad—one reason why I have always been interested in the activities he is involved in.