Skip to main content

MGNREGA: How caste and power hollowed out India’s largest welfare law

By Sudhir Katiyar, Mallica Patel* 
The sudden dismantling of MGNREGA once again exposes the limits of progressive legislation in the absence of transformation of a casteist, semi-feudal rural society. Over two days in the winter session, the Modi government dismantled one of the most progressive legislations of the UPA regime—the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA).
This can be described as yet another nail in the coffin of the supposedly welfare state erected by the Congress-led UPA regimes. One of the principal grounds on which the transformation of MGNREGA into G-RAM-G is being critiqued is that MGNREGA was based on a rights-based architecture, while its new version is a scheme dependent on the largesse of the state. It can be argued that even if a fraction of the vast number of workers who found employment under MGNREGA had been organised, and had come to view the programme as a right rather than a dole from the state, the current government would not have dared to dilute the Act.
This article undertakes a brief review of the implementation experience of the Act, attempts at organising workers, and the necessity of a social transformation that must go hand in hand with progressive legislation. It critiques the liberal propensity to legislate poverty alleviation and rights without any attempt at grassroots transformation of a casteist, semi-feudal social base.
Gradual Weakening of MGNREGA
MGNREGA was a highly progressive and ambitious Act that had the potential to push up wages for a massive rural workforce that survives on the brink of starvation for most parts of the year, while also contributing to broader social change. The Act guaranteed 100 days of employment to any willing rural worker in India, along with compensation for days when work was not provided. Delayed payments were also legally liable for compensation.
The Act did bear out its promise in the initial years. Studies reported that it led to a significant reduction in rural poverty and a rise in wage rates.
However, as with most development schemes in India, once the rural power elite became familiar with the programme, leakages began to emerge. MGNREGA led to a massive inflow of funds at the panchayat level, which in turn gave rise to widespread corruption. Attempts to plug these leakages resulted in a series of technical interventions—so much so that the programme has been described as a “technical laboratory” by Rajendran Narayanan, an academic and activist associated with the NREGA Sangharsh Morcha.
Wage payments were routed through banks and later linked to Aadhaar. Gradually, payments that were initially made at the panchayat level were shifted to the state level and finally to the central level, effectively rendering state governments toothless in implementation.
The Centre for Labour Research and Action, which works with seasonal migrant workers engaged in distress migration and who should have been a natural beneficiary group of MGNREGA, conducted a baseline survey of migrant brick-kiln workers from three districts of western Odisha in 2017. The survey found that out of 560 NREGS job card–holding households, nearly two-thirds (63.4 per cent) did not receive even a single day of work in the previous year, despite a legal guarantee of 150 days of work per annum at the time.
One of the major reasons cited for the unwillingness of job card holders to seek work under NREGS is chronic delays in wage payments and endemic corruption. Wage payments were often delayed by eight to twelve months. LibTech India, which has been tracking NREGA for several years, has consistently documented such delays and large-scale deletions of workers’ names from muster rolls. In its latest report, researchers found that as of September 2025, there had been an 11.7 per cent and 25.6 per cent drop in person-days generated compared to FY 2024–25 and FY 2023–24 respectively. This decline comes on top of a steady fall in person-days over the past few years.
Additionally, the compulsory eKYC facial recognition requirement has further complicated workers’ access to employment, with 46.9 per cent of active workers unable to complete eKYC as of November 2025. While the total number of workers added to the rolls has increased, overall employment under the scheme has declined.
In this context, Rajendran Narayanan speaks of a “discouraged worker effect”. Persistent wage delays, he argues, discourage workers from asserting their rights under the Act. “When the central government acts so rigidly, workers’ trust in the system of unionisation begins to erode,” he notes. He also points to untested and opaque technologies that further confuse workers and restrict access to benefits.
Organising MGNREGA Workers
Many of these leakages could have been curtailed had beneficiaries been effectively organised. While there have been attempts in several states to organise NREGA workers, given the sheer size of the workforce, these efforts have been piecemeal and grossly inadequate. Most initiatives have been driven by civil society organisations and are better described as mobilisation rather than genuine organising.
It is significant that none of the major trade union federations took the initiative to organise NREGA workers on a large scale. In Rajasthan, the Labour Department refused to recognise NREGA workers’ unions, arguing that beneficiaries did not qualify as workers under the Trade Union Act.
Nevertheless, efforts were successful in other states, and NREGA workers’ unions were formed in several regions.
These organisations came together to form the NREGA Sangharsh Morcha (NSM) in 2016. Since then, the Morcha has coordinated struggles to defend the Act, including a 100-day sit-in at Jantar Mantar in 2024.
With the Act now effectively repealed, the NSM is planning a sustained movement. The main opposition party has also promised a nationwide agitation. However, sustained agitation requires a politically conscious, organised, and mobilised mass base.
The Way Forward
Commenting on the essential powerlessness and helplessness of India’s vast underclass, the progressive Hindi poet Dushyant Kumar wrote these famous lines:
"न हो कमीज, तो पैरों से पेट ढक लेंगे
ये लोग कितने मुनासिब हैं, इस सफ़र के लिए"
This translates as:
“If people do not have shirts, they will use their legs to cover their stomachs. How convenient these people are for this journey!”
States that have progressed in independent India—both economically and socially—such as Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Punjab, Maharashtra (to some extent), are precisely those that witnessed deep-rooted social transformation at the grassroots level. These transformations were driven primarily by strong anti-Brahminical, anti-caste movements and, in Kerala’s case, a powerful Left movement. This social churning laid the foundation for subsequent economic growth and improved social indicators.
In his final speech to the Constituent Assembly on November 25, 1949, Dr B.R. Ambedkar explicitly warned that political democracy would be hollow without social and economic democracy. The liberal bourgeoisie has attempted to achieve this equality through a series of reformist laws—against child marriage, caste discrimination, and through statutes such as the Right to Education, Right to Food, and Right to Employment.
While such rights-based legislation is necessary, it must be accompanied by the empowerment of people to demand real implementation. One of the most basic tools for such empowerment—mass education—has been systematically neglected. Large sections of the Indian working class remain functionally illiterate. Government schooling systems, where children of the poor study, have collapsed in vast parts of the country, while the better-off send their children to private schools. The Common School System—the only viable means to eliminate this divide—did not even find mention in the Right to Education Act.
This episode once again demonstrates that progressive legislation, in the absence of a sustained social movement that dismantles a regressive social base, cannot travel very far.
---
*Centre for Labor Research and Action

Comments

TRENDING

Academics urge Azim Premji University to drop FIR against Student Reading Circle

  By A Representative   A group of academics and civil society members has issued an open letter to the leadership of Azim Premji University expressing concern over the filing of a police complaint that led to an FIR against a student-run reading circle following a recent incident of violence on campus. The signatories state that they hold the university in high regard for its commitment to constitutional values, critical inquiry and ethical public engagement, and argue that it is precisely because of this reputation that the present development is troubling.

'Policy long overdue': Coalition of 29 experts tells JP Nadda to act on SC warning label order

By A Representative   In a significant development for public health, the Supreme Court of India has directed the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) to seriously consider implementing mandatory front-of-pack warning labels on pre-packaged food products. The order, passed by a bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan on February 10, 2026, comes as the Court expressed dissatisfaction with the regulatory body's progress on the issue.

When tourism meets tribal law: The Vanajangi dispute in Andhra Pradesh

By Palla Trinadha Rao   A writ petition presently before the High Court of Andhra Pradesh has brought into focus an increasingly important question in the governance of tribal regions: can eco-tourism projects in Scheduled Areas be implemented without the consent of the Gram Sabha? The case concerns the establishment of a Community Based Eco-Tourism centre at Vanajangi village in Paderu Mandal of Alluri Sitarama Raju District, a region located within the Scheduled Areas of Andhra Pradesh. 

UAPA action against Telangana activist: Criminalising legitimate democratic activity?

By A Representative   The National Investigation Agency's Hyderabad branch has issued notices to more than ten individuals in Telangana in connection with FIR No. RC-04/2025. Those served include activists, former student leaders, civil rights advocates, poets, writers, retired schoolteachers, and local leaders associated with the Communist Party of India (CPI) and the Indian National Congress. 

Vaccination vs screening: Policy questions raised on cervical cancer strategy

By A Representative   A public policy expert has written to Union Health Minister J. P. Nadda raising a series of concerns regarding the national Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination campaign launched on February 28 for 14-year-old girls.

The new anti-national certificate: If Arundhati Roy is the benchmark, count me in

By Dr. Mansee Bal Bhargava*   Dear MANIT Alumni Network Committee, “Are you anti-national?” I encountered this fascinating—some may say intimidating—question from an elderly woman I barely know, an alumna of Maulana Azad College of Technology (MACT, now Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology - MANIT), Bhopal, and apparently one of the founders of the MACT (now MANIT) Alumni Network. The authority with which she posed the question was striking. “How much anti-national are you? What have you done for the Alumni Network Committee to identify you as anti-national?” When I asked what “anti-national” meant to her and who was busy certifying me as such, the response came in counter-questions.

The ultimate all-time ODI XI: A personal selection of icons across eras

By Harsh Thakor* This is my all-time best XI chosen for ODI (One Day International) cricket:  1. Adam Gilchrist (W) – The absolute master blaster who could create the impact of exploding gunpowder with his electrifying strokeplay. No batsman was more intimidating in his era. Often his knocks decided the fate of games as though the result were premeditated. He escalated batting strike rates to surreal realms.

Buddhist shrines were 'massively destroyed' by Brahmanical rulers: Historian DN Jha

Nalanda mahavihara By Rajiv Shah  Prominent historian DN Jha, an expert in India's ancient and medieval past, in his new book , "Against the Grain: Notes on Identity, Intolerance and History", in a sharp critique of "Hindutva ideologues", who look at the ancient period of Indian history as "a golden age marked by social harmony, devoid of any religious violence", has said, "Demolition and desecration of rival religious establishments, and the appropriation of their idols, was not uncommon in India before the advent of Islam".

Minority concerns mount: RTI reveals govt funded Delhi religious meet in December

By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  Indian Muslims have expressed deep concern over what they describe as rising hate speech and hostility against their community under the BJP-led government in India. A recent flashpoint was the event organised by Sanatan Sanstha titled “Sanatan Rashtra Shankhnad Mahotsav” in New Delhi on 13–14 December 2025.