Context:
The Union Government is yet to finalize objective parameters for fund allocation before rolling out the Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025, which replaces MGNREGA, 2005.
Key Highlights:
- Government Initiative / Policy Details
- The VB-G RAM G Act, 2025 provides a statutory guarantee of up to 125 days of wage employment to rural households.
- It replaces MGNREGA, which guaranteed 100 days of employment.
- Implementation is pending due to consultations with State governments.
- Normative Allocation & Administrative Issues
- The Centre is yet to finalize “normative allocation” criteria for distributing funds among States.
- Allocation will be based on objective parameters prescribed annually.
- Rules need to be framed under 11 categories, including social audit mechanisms.
- Stakeholders Involved
- Union Ministry of Rural Development
- State Governments
- Rural households and labourers
- Civil society (for social audits)
- Significance / Concerns
- Increased employment guarantee may improve rural livelihoods and income security.
- Delay in defining allocation norms may affect timely implementation.
- Concerns over centralized control vs state-specific needs.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- VB-G RAM G Act, 2025
- Guarantees 125 days of wage employment in rural areas.
- Focus: Unskilled manual work.
- MGNREGA, 2005
- Legal guarantee of 100 days employment.
- Demand-driven scheme with right to work.
- Normative Allocation
- Formula-based distribution of funds using pre-defined indicators.
- Social Audit
- Participatory review involving beneficiaries and local communities.
- MyGov Platform
- Citizen engagement platform (e.g., logo competition).
Relevant Mains Points:
- Significance of Expanding Employment Guarantee
- Enhances rural economic resilience.
- Addresses seasonal unemployment and distress migration.
- Supports inclusive growth and social justice.
- Challenges in Implementation
- Lack of clarity in allocation criteria may lead to inequity.
- Risk of bureaucratic delays and weak institutional capacity.
- Ensuring transparency and accountability in social audits.
- Centre-State Relations
- Balancing centralized funding mechanisms with state-level flexibility.
- Need for cooperative federalism in scheme execution.
- Way Forward
- Finalize transparent and data-driven allocation formula.
- Strengthen digital monitoring and social audit systems.
- Ensure timely fund release and grievance redressal.
- Build state capacity and decentralised planning mechanisms.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2 – Governance, Social Justice (welfare schemes, federalism)
• GS 3 – Economy (employment generation, rural development)
• Prelims – Schemes, features of MGNREGA vs new Act
