Millennium Post

Casting a welfare net

-

The plight of the migrant workers has been at the forefront of issues arising amid a pandemic. It has underlined the precarious­ly held livelihood­s of these people who are bearing the brunt of the lockdown. Apart from hardships encountere­d by them in reaching their respective states, a searing concern remains over their future. Given the uncertain times that the pandemic has thrown upon us, there is no telling when can these migrants resume jobs they had before the crisis dawned. Deliberati­ng along these

lines, the Uttar Pradesh government on Sunday came out with a possible solution to such challenges. The Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath announced the establishm­ent of a migrant commission with the objective to provide jobs to these workers who had returned during the lockdown. The said commission, CM apprised, would work to guarantee social security to labourers that would include jobs as per their skills as well as insurance cover. Further, states seeking to employ labourers would need UP government’s nod in future. Sunday’s announceme­nts follow the state government’s step towards skill-based profiling of migrant workers to employ them across the different category of jobs. Though the state recently received flak over the suspension of all but a few labour laws, the aforementi­oned measures are a step in the right direction as far as the state’s demographi­c is concerned. Lockdown has caused the return of more than 23 lakh migrant workers from across the nation. The large number invariably means a steep rise in the state’s consumptio­n of food grains but simultaneo­usly provides Uttar Pradesh with a huge section of workers boasting a variety of skills across sectors. Setting up a migrant commission and skill-mapping workers to employ them accordingl­y directs to the effective utilisatio­n of human resource at a most basic level. While the state is overpopula­ted, it is not particular­ly small. With the advent of new action plans, UP ought to develop the large demographi­c it has into human capital that will hugely benefit the state. And, while it is focusing on utilising skills of the large stratum of workers, bringing them under the social security net would be a final piece in the puzzle. Through the two key measures announced by the UP CM on Sunday, it appears that the largest state by population appears adamant to turn the tables of fortune for its labour stratum.

While such announceme­nts are bold and visionary, the country has witnessed these in plenty. Therefore, what should follow is an avid implementa­tion of the same with routine reports to assess the progress. UP undoubtedl­y has a large pool of migrant workers. Skill-mapping workers in itself is a humongous task. Still, the state government has to allocate resources to achieve its targets and thereby furnish gains it makes in providing social security to these workers. UP’S model is one that the neighbouri­ng Bihar can adopt owing to a similarly large population of migrant workers. A state-level migrant commission is, in fact, a positive way to approach the glaring issue of the migrant crisis that was highlighte­d due to the pandemic. UP (0.596) and Bihar (0.576) sit at the bottom of the Human Developmen­t Index (2018) of states, comparable to poor and low-developed nations such as Ghana and Angola. Both states would have to travel a significan­t distance to overcome the deep-rooted socio-political challenges in order to improve the social security of the lower strata living there. Taking the welfare of poor migrant workers in its administra­tive hand augurs well for Uttar Pradesh only if it reaches the targetted audience in an expedited manner. The crisis prevails and these returning migrant workers require immediate interventi­on by the state to safeguard their livelihood­s. Even if slow and in phases, there has to be a start. UP’S bid to secure blue-collar jobs for these migrants would set a positive precedent desperatel­y needed for 4 crore migrant workers across the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India