Daily News Analysis

VB–G RAM G Bill, 2025

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The Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill, 2025 was introduced by the Ministry of Rural Development in the Lok Sabha as an upgrade to MGNREGA (2005).

  • The Bill represents a shift from a universal, rights-based, demand-driven employment guarantee to a budget-capped, supply-driven model.

  • It aligns with the vision of Viksit Bharat @2047, focusing on planned asset creation and productivity-linked employment.

  • The need for this shift arises from the decline in rural poverty from 25.7% in 2011–12 to nearly 5% in 2023–24, reducing the role of MGNREGA as a pure distress-relief scheme.

Key Provisions of VB–G RAM G

  1. Statutory Wage Employment Guarantee
    The Bill guarantees 125 days of wage employment per rural household per financial year for adult members willing to undertake unskilled manual work.

  2. Conditional and Non-Universal Coverage
    Unlike MGNREGA’s universal coverage, the VB–G RAM G Bill restricts employment to rural areas notified by the Union Government, making it conditional rather than nationwide.

  3. Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans (VGPPs)
    Rural development plans will be prepared bottom-up using spatial technology, aggregated at Block, District, and State levels, and integrated with PM Gati Shakti for coordinated infrastructure development.

  4. Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) Structure

    • The cost-sharing pattern is revised to 60:40 for most States, while North-Eastern and Himalayan States/UTs retain 90:10.

    • State-wise allocations will be determined annually by the Union Government, limiting States’ flexibility to expand employment during distress.

  5. Flexibility during Agricultural Seasons
    States are allowed to pause the programme for up to 60 days during peak sowing and harvesting seasons to ensure availability of farm labour.

  6. Unemployment Allowance
    States are required to provide unemployment allowance if employment is not offered within 15 days of demand.

Expected Benefits

  1. Labour Market Rationalisation
    The Bill supports low-productivity agriculture workers, encouraging a shift toward non-farm employment while maintaining farm productivity.

  2. Fiscal Predictability and Planning
    The budget-capped, supply-driven framework allows planned works, fund allocation, and asset creation, reducing the open-ended liabilities that MGNREGA carried.

  3. Improved Asset Quality
    Employment will focus on planned, durable assets integrated with PM Gati Shakti, improving long-term economic value in rural areas.

  4. Greater State Ownership and Accountability
    Higher State financial contribution is expected to promote timely completion, supervision, and quality control.

  5. Administrative Efficiency
    Spatial technology, digital monitoring, and AI systems are expected to reduce leakages and ghost beneficiaries, improving transparency.

Potential Challenges

  1. Dilution of Rights-Based Guarantee
    The shift to a supply-driven model reduces enforceability of employment rights and may weaken income security.

  2. Retreat from Progressive Welfare Commitments
    By aligning employment support with State capacity, the Bill risks rolling back MGNREGA’s justiciable statutory right to work under Article 41.

  3. Weakening Rural Shock-Absorber Mechanism
    The budget-capped approach may limit the programme’s ability to respond during crises, unlike MGNREGA, which provided 389 crore person-days of employment during COVID-19 (2020–21).

  4. Selective Coverage and Reduced Income Security
    Restriction to Union-notified areas and agricultural pause provisions may lead to exclusion of vulnerable households and reduced year-round income.

  5. Increased Fiscal Burden on States
    Poorer States may struggle to meet the higher financial contribution, resulting in delayed wages, fewer workdays, and uneven implementation.

  6. Techno-Administrative Exclusion
    Mandatory biometrics, GPS-linked attendance, and AI monitoring could exclude older, migrant, or low-connectivity workers.

  7. Cosmetic Expansion of Workdays
    Raising the ceiling to 125 days may not improve outcomes if households still receive less than 100 days, as seen under MGNREGA.

Complementary Government Initiatives

  • DAY-NRLM: Promotes self-employment, SHGs, financial inclusion, and livelihood diversification.

  • DDU-GKY: Provides skill development and placement-linked employment for rural youth.

  • Survey of Villages with Improvised Technology: Issues property cards enabling rural households to access credit and investment opportunities.

  • PM Vishwakarma: Supports traditional artisans through skilling, toolkits, and credit linkage for non-farm employment.

Measures to Strengthen VB–G RAM G

  1. Hybrid Rights–Planning Model
    Guarantee a minimum number of demand-driven workdays for vulnerable households, while additional employment is planned.

  2. Transparent Area Notification
    Identify rural areas for the scheme using data-driven criteria such as poverty, climate vulnerability, and migration patterns.

  3. Discretionary Expansion for Local Distress
    Allow temporary increase in workdays and budget during localized economic, climate, or agricultural shocks.

  4. Safeguards Against Tech Exclusion
    Use offline alternatives and human oversight to prevent exclusion due to technical failures.

  5. Outcome-Based Monitoring
    Focus on income-generating, climate-resilient assets and track asset durability, income stability, and skill transition.

  6. Crisis-Responsive Flexibility
    Build automatic triggers for expanding workdays and budgets during economic or climate shocks, preserving the programme’s role as a rural stabiliser.

Conclusion

The VB–G RAM G Bill reflects changing rural realities, emphasizing planned asset creation, fiscal predictability, and productivity-linked employment.

  • Opportunities: Greater efficiency, asset quality, and State ownership.

  • Risks: Weakening income security, exclusion of vulnerable households, and higher State fiscal burden.

  • Way Forward: A balanced model combining minimum demand-driven rights with planned, productive, and climate-resilient employment is essential to achieve SDG 1 (No Poverty) and SDG 8 (Decent Work).


 

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