Business Standard

Centre to review spending pattern of rural job scheme

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE New Delhi, 25 November

The Centre has formed a high-level panel headed by a former bureaucrat to undertake a comprehens­ive review of the flagship rural job guarantee scheme’s expenditur­e pattern, governance structure, and administra­tive issues with an aim to plug loopholes and leakages.

The move comes ahead of the Budget, with questions over the hefty allocation for the scheme despite resumption of normal economic activity.

Sources said the panel, formed in October, is slated to submit its report by January, just before the 2023-24 Union Budget is placed in Parliament in February.

The review is a pan-indian exercise that will also look at areas and districts where Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) expenditur­e has surged during the past few years, and the reasons thereof. According to some reports, the spending on MGNREGS in poorer states such as Bihar and Odisha has been lower than the relatively economical­ly affluent ones such as Tamil Nadu, which have a higher per-capita income. “One big focus area of the panel would be to understand whether MGNREGS has been fulfilling its role of poverty alleviatio­n and whether there needs to be any change in focus for that,” a senior official directly involved in the process told Business Standard.

He said a fundamenta­l alteration of the MGNREGS structure looked very unlikely because it was a legislatio­n unlike any other government schemes, and would need Parliament approval.

“MGNREGS was started in 2006 and 16 years have passed since then. The scheme’s performanc­e and progress has been reviewed several times in the past and the current one is also being done with the same objective to make it more in sync with changing times and requiremen­ts,” another official said.

Work demand for MGNREGS has shown signs of slackening in the past few months. In October, around 15.5 million households sought work under the scheme, which is higher than the correspond­ing precovid month of October 2019, but much less than the demand for the same month in the next two years.

The October work demand under the scheme, according to the MGNREGS website, is the lowest in a month so far in this financial year.

However, the fact that a significan­t number of people are still seeking work under this scheme means that if the trend continues in the months ahead, there is a chance that once again close to 70 million households could seek work, said experts.

Before the pandemic, 50-55 million households regularly used to seek work in a year. This has jumped to over 70 million per year since the pandemic. If this year, too, over 70 million households demand work, then it will mean that the scheme characteri­stics have fundamenta­lly undergone a change and overall economic growth is still not percolatin­g down to the rural and unorganise­d segments of the society.

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 ?? Source: MGNREGS ??
Source: MGNREGS

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