The India Rural
Development Report 2012/13 was released here by Shri Jairam
Ramesh, Minister for Rural Development, Government of
India. The Report was prepared by IDFC Foundation in collaboration with network
partners, the Centre for Economic and Social Studies (CESS), the Institute for
Rural Management Anand (IRMA), and the Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR),
with contributions from several other researchers, experts and civil society
organisations. On the occasion, Dr. Mihir Shah,
Member, Planning Commission, gave a special address. Dr. Rajiv Lall, Executive Chairman, IDFC, highlighted the key points
of the Report. The launch was followed by an animated panel discussion on
‘Enhancing Rural Livelihoods: What Can Be Done?’
Concurring with
the Report’s analysis of why government programmes have not been as effective
in achieving their goals, Shri Jairam Ramesh said “We need
continuous evaluation and feedback to help us improve our rural programmes for
which we are setting up an independent Concurrent Evaluation Office.”
Commenting on
the thread of sustainability that runs through the Report, Dr. Mihir Shah emphasised the centrality of water to rural
life, saying “Water, which is critical
for survival and livelihoods, must be managed holistically across different
uses, with coordination across government departments, and with community
participation.”
Dr. Rajiv Lall underscored the need to find innovative solutions to
address some of the most pressing challenges, saying “While rural consumption and aspirations are rising, we can no longer
fail to provide our rural population basic services and opportunities to
enhance their livelihoods.”
The Report
provides a comprehensive landscape of rural India, covering debates on topical
issues, providing empirical analyses and synthesising literature across a
spectrum of issues including regional disparity and deprivation; the changing
nature of livelihoods; sustainability of natural resources; and the changing
role of the state and local self-governance. It reviews all major central
government rural programmes and schemes and, in particular, the flagship
MGNREGA. It will be a valuable resource for policy makers, state and local
bodies, researchers and the private sector.
· The Report
highlights the need to develop new strategies for farm livelihoods.
o
Income from farm livelihoods is no longer sufficient
for a household, especially for smaller and marginal farmers, who make up 85
percent of farm holdings, and for dryland farmers
that occupy more than half the cultivated area.
o Need to
encourage new crop models for them, and revive traditional crops like millets,
that suit drylands. Cultivation of different
varieties of millets, which are hardy and nutritious, can be promoted by
procuring and distributing through the public distribution system (PDS).
o
Various types of collective farming have helped
small farmers overcome problems of scale, insecure land tenancy and poor access
to credit, modern supply chains and storage.
o
Nearly 2 million farmers in Andhra Pradesh have
successfully adopted community-managed sustainable agriculture (CMSA),
significantly reducing their cost of cultivation and soil toxicity by doing
away with chemical inputs while increasing or maintaining yields.
o
Water efficiency in farming is also critical as
80 percent of water use is for agriculture. Water must be considered a community
resource and the management of both ground and surface water must be looked at
holistically across all uses of water.
·
Non-farm income sources are increasingly
important – 43 percent of rural families rely on non-farm employment as their
major income source.
o
Indian rural households are typically pluriactive, combining work on their own farm, with that on
others’ farms, animal husbandry, and commuting or migrating to undertake
non-farm activities in villages, towns or cities.
o
Non-farm employment offers better wages and
social mobility for lower castes to move out of agricultural labour. There is
also some evidence that higher non-farm wages have helped increase agricultural
wages.
o
Non-farm work is predominantly casual in nature
with most work in the construction and trade sectors. Even manufacturing
employment has become increasingly informal over time. This denies workers job
security and benefits of formal employment.
o
Must tackle the important barriers to non-farm
livelihoods - lack of access to credit, marketing and skills. Financing skill
training is difficult: trainees are not assured job placement or higher wages,
and employers find training not relevant or employee retention difficult. While
some projects have worked scalable solutions are needed.
o
Recently, the government launched Aajeevika – aimed at skill development, assisting the poor
set up small businesses and expanding access to capital through SHGs.
·
Poverty, though reducing, is increasingly
concentrated amongst certain regions and social groups.
o In 1993–94,
nearly 50 per cent of the rural poor lived in seven states — Jharkhand, Bihar,
Assam, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar
Pradesh. This rose to 65 percent in 2011–12, though states like Bihar,
Chhattisgarh and Uttar Pradesh have reduced poverty significantly since
2009-10.
o These states,
along with Rajasthan, also fare worst on education learning levels, child and
maternal health, and poor penetration of healthcare services.
o Only 18
percent of rural households have access to all three basic services – drinking
water within premises, sanitation and electricity – and 20 percent have none of
them.
o Almost all
the bottom two quintiles of districts in terms of access to the three basic
services are in Rajasthan and the seven states excluding Assam. There are also
pockets of deprivation in richer states, such as Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra
and Karnataka, which are mostly in dryland areas.
o Poverty is
markedly higher among scheduled castes (SCs) and scheduled tribes (STs) who
together constituted 44 percent of the rural poor in 2009-10.
o Despite
progressive legislation, SCs and STs continue to face discrimination, limiting
their participation in economic, social and political spheres. They have the
highest rates of malnutrition, child mortality, and access to public health
services. STs fare the worst.
·
Government spending on productivity-enhancing
infrastructure has a more significant and lasting impact on poverty reduction
than spending on subsidies.
o Village-level
connectivity has improved, especially roads,
electricity and telecommunications. Yet
results are not commensurate with government expenditure. Household-level
access is poor, especially for the most vulnerable, and infrastructure assets
are often of poor quality, incomplete, unusable or badly maintained.
o Almost all
villages are connected to the grid, but 45 percent of rural households lack
electricity connections. Electricity supply is often unreliable and water
supply unavailable or polluted. Almost 70 percent rural households lack
sanitation facilities.
o Also, in
education, nutrition and health, service delivery is marred by widespread
absenteeism of government healthcare providers and teachers, leading to poor
outcomes.
o Learning from
past experience, government approaches are changing and must include:
-
Community ownership of assets: Some communities have successfully monitored
drinking water quality, ensured equitable access and maintenance of assets
built.
-
Maintenance: PMGSY has built all-weather quality
roads, with maintenance built into the construction contract. States must set
aside funds to budget for maintenance.
-
Change in targeting approach. The 2011
Socio-Economic and Caste Census, has collected information on a range of
deprivation indicators, is verified by the gram sabha.
-
Greater flexibility under schemes for states and
PRIs to adapt to local conditions
-
Addressing institutional fragmentation,
streamlining responsibilities between ministries and between state and local
governments, and greater convergence in scheme delivery.
-
Incentivising private provision where possible:
Just as competition expanded reach and affordability of telecoms in urban areas
needs to be replicated in rural areas by using the universal service obligation
fund to encourage private competition in rural telephony.
-
Improve transparency and accountability of
public service delivery through social audits or public checks by the gram sabha. Increased use of performance-based incentives and
conditional cash transfers could also significantly improve outcomes.
· Panchayati
Raj Institutions (PRIs) were envisioned to create more participatory,
accountable and resource-efficient governance but they have not succeeded for
several reasons.
o States need
to devolve more funds, support staff and functions as well as ensure regular
revenue flows to PRIs. They must also clarify and assign responsibilities to
avoid overlap with parallel agencies, and strengthen capacity building of PRIs.
o Interference
by local elites and corruption could be addressed by increasing gram sabha awareness on participation rights, and social audits.
· MGNREGA has
provided an average of 40-50 days of employment per year to about 25 percent of
all rural households making it the largest public works programme in India’s
history.
o Self-targeting
has worked to an extent, as the Scheme has served more poor and disadvantaged
households, women, SCs and STs, than better-off households.
o It has helped
empower women by providing them employment on equal terms. Women account for
almost half the total person days of employment under MGNREGS.
o The Scheme
has contributed to reducing poverty, both directly as well as indirectly, by
putting upward pressure on agricultural wages.
o But the programme has inadequate coverage
amongst the needy (despite their demand for work) especially in those states
that have a high incidence of poverty, possibly reflecting weaker governance in
those states. Other issues that must be dealt with urgently are delays in
providing work and in wage payments, and shortage of engineering staff.
o MGNREGA holds
considerably more potential which can be unlocked by ensuring that good quality
assets are built and there is more active participation by the gram sabha which strengthens local government.
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