The Free Press Journal

Creating the resilience to dream

“How would you like your children to be when they grow up,” he asked. “Like you,” she said.

- Anish Kumar & Anirban Ghose Kumar is co-lead at Transformi­ng Rural India Foundation. He was part of the senior management team at PRADAN, India’s leading rural developmen­t nonprofit. Ghose is co-lead of Transform Rural India and has been on the leadersh

The man asking the question was R Venkataram­an, Managing Trustee of Tata Trusts and the woman answering it was a farmer whose income had increased tenfold to Rs 2 lakh annually through her work in the selfhelp groups (SHGs). Although her family’s life had improved due to food availabili­ty and more income, the quality of life on several counts had not changed. For instance, schools in her village are non-functional and healthcare non-existent. Her increased income therefore had not translated into better opportunit­ies for her son.

Her statement—I want him to be like you— stayed with us. We were at PRADAN then and had been working with communitie­s across India for over two decades. At that point, we asked ourselves: what will it take for the next generation of Indians, whoever they are and wherever they are, to have the same set of opportunit­ies as the privileged urban-born?

Could we look beyond just providing jobs, training and skills to a generation of men and women, and instead focus on ensuring equal opportunit­ies for their children at least? It won’t happen on its own.

Through our work in rural India for over two decades, we know that left to market forces—despite rapid economic growth and expanding government social spends—the inhabitant­s of the bottom 1, 00,000 villages (of the 6,00,000 villages in our country), do not and will not have the same opportunit­ies as citizens born in urban India or even other villages. Not at a systemic, mass level at least. Sure, we have an APJ Abdul Kalam, who was able to get himself out of a deprived background and become DRDO chief and the President of India. But what about his friends, his brothers, relatives and neighbours? What are the chances that they got out? We never talk about those left behind.

Individual ascension can happen— with some education and a great deal of luck. But how do you take developmen­t to the entire village? How do you build basic resilience, so that our future generation­s can aspire to and achieve better lives?

The stepping stones to resilience Addressing hunger

It starts with food-sufficienc­y. We remember one of the first conversati­ons we had when we joined PRADAN and one of our colleagues told us bhookhe pait bhajan na hoye. One needs food in one’s stomach before one has the ability to aspire.

When PRADAN started its work in the 1980s, addressing hunger and poverty was a priority. We believed that if you worked with communitie­s to create strong livelihood opportunit­ies in an empowering manner linked to government and private markets, it would have a positive domino effect on the other challenges they faced—health, nutrition, education. One had also hoped that there would be gains around the intra-family and the inter-family relationsh­ips, in terms of gender, caste, the ability to influence local decision making and so on.

But in 2005, when we did our strategy— refresh and reflected on our work in the earlier decades, we realised that this whole premise of automatic spill over gains to other areas was not happening. While there were enough anecdotes, the impact was limited to increased incomes (in some cases as high as Rs 1.5-2 lakh annually).

Cash flows had increased and there was more food at home. But for most households this did not translate into other important areas like child malnourish­ment that continued to be high as did maternal and infant mortality. Adding to it was the condition of women who had little control over their increased incomes (even though all our activity was focussed on women and increasing their incomes). They had even lesser decision-making powers and almost no control over assets.

Building social capital

This made us more acutely aware of the second necessary condition for developmen­t that is social capital—acquiring a voice and some sense of agency—through mobilisati­on of groups and communitie­s. The SHG movement which started on a small scale in the 1980s was taken to scale by nonprofits in the 2000s and later adopted by the government. Today there are a large numbers of villagers, even in the bottom 1 lakh villages, where some level of social capital has been created.

Meeting aspiration­s

Once this kind of foundation exists— enough food, money and some social capital— there arises an opportunit­y to mobilise the aspiration­al energy of the community. The challenge today is clearly people’s aspiration­s of having equal opportunit­ies for their next generation. But there are barriers…

Traditiona­l norms and practices limit opportunit­y

Consider the situation of the tribal community. They have a huge sense of identity and pride and are unable to work in hotels and clean dishes, it’s not acceptable to them. However, unlike non-tribals where some castes will work in towns and cities. So, the only jobs tribals end up doing is building roads and digging trenches. This is a 100-million strong segment of society and the only opportunit­y open to them (outside of marginalis­ed farming) is road constructi­on.

Sense of hopelessne­ss

At the policy makers’ level, the ‘aam janta’ and even within the developmen­t fraternity, there is this sense of ‘ki bhaiya, yaha toh kuch hone vala nahi’. Nothing can happen here. There is a feeling of hopelessne­ss and fatigue, especially if you have been doing it for a long time and you see change happening really slowly. Many of us have worked on economic developmen­t issues and take pride in our work but when we seek to answer the question of what will it take for their children to be like our children and the increasing gap between the two, one can only feel overwhelme­d.

Feeling of entitlemen­t

We have reached a stage today where there is a strong sense of rights, but not of responsibi­lities. There is a sense of entitlemen­t that has been seeping through in the way people think and act, and we have seen this increase over the two decades that we have been in the field with PRADAN and now TRI Foundation. One such example is when we were in Hazaribagh in central Jharkhand and talking to the women in the SHG. This SHG is among the top 5 per cent of SHGs in India and a poster child of the movement. Every year, the women distribute a dividend among themselves of Rs 18-25K per person. Despite the overall economic prosperity in the village, we saw malnourish­ed children. When asked whether the women had thought about nutrition for their children, they were very articulate. They said that they had created a citizen report on the state of ICDS in their block, had mobilised themselves and then gheraoed the officials demanding rations be delivered to their villages. They were told that the government machinery is not in a position to deliver rations for six months. When we asked them, “you have the money, why won’t you buy the nutrient-rich food and feed the children”, the women answered saying “we are entitled to the rations”! We understand there might be other factors and this maybe an oversimpli­fication, but the reality is that people are not taking responsibi­lity for their own lives.

It doesn’t mean you let the government off the hook; you should hold them accountabl­e. But one must also focus on solving the problem and for that one must focus inward and see what can be done by themselves.

Build resilience – adopting a multi-pronged approach

We, along with the Tata Trusts and with guidance from Dr Sanjiv Phansalkar, analysed the situation on the ground. Having understood the enormity of people’s aspiration­s, we realised that if the developmen­t indicators had to change for good, we had to look at two things that: • Communitie­s can do themselves with a little support in terms of knowledge and capacity • Need external support from government­s and markets For instance, in the area of child malnourish­ment, the women can do the recommende­d IYCF practices themselves. But when the child is ready for vaccinatio­n that has to be supplied by an external entity and injected by a trained person. This external ecosystem support could come either from the government or a private, marketbase­d enterprise.

Having understood this, we broke it down further to understand the basic things that people require to live comfortabl­y. After several conversati­ons across multiple states we narrowed it down to four key areas: • People in the bottom 1, 00,000 villages need about Rs 8,00012,000 monthly cash income to live well. This translates to around Rs 11.5 lakh additional income. • Basic healthcare and nutrition, focussing on pregnancy to the first five years of a child’s life and basic cognitive developmen­t. In essence, preventive, formative and curative healthcare. • Primary education to ensure a certain level of foundation­al education and mobility. • Safe drinking water and sanitation. In order to ensure that the marginalis­ed communitie­s have an influence in local decision-making and are not excluded from services and infrastruc­ture, we included local governance and gender as cross cutting issues as these parameters are closely interlinke­d. Therefore, if we have villages where we are able to move the needle on these four result areas and the cross cutting issues of governance and gender, then we will be in a position to say that this village has the wherewitha­l to thrive on its own steam and that its children are wellequipp­ed to capitalise on opportunit­ies across India and the world.

Connecting to urban India on equal terms

The opportunit­ies outside of the village are the ones that the woman who met Venkat wanted for her son. If the country is growing, the bottom two deciles of rural India should also be able to participat­e in this growth. However, if I have to connect with the opportunit­y only as a coolie, and my child also has to engage with that world only as coolie, then that is not opportunit­y. To be able to participat­e on equal terms and negotiate these opportunit­ies, there has to be an interplay between what the communitie­s can do themselves and a supportive ecosystem of public and private markets. SamajSarka­r-Bazaar have to come together if we have to address the rural-urban cleavage.

 ?? CHARLOTTE ANDERSON ??
CHARLOTTE ANDERSON

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