Employment Guarantee Programmes Existed Long Before MGNREGS, Now Largely Overlooked

Context:

  • India’s well-known MGNREGS (2005) is often seen as the first major employment guarantee program.

  • However, the roots of such schemes go much deeper, stretching back to famine relief public works in pre-colonial India and pioneering state experiments like Maharashtra’s Employment Guarantee Scheme (EGS).

Key Highlights:

Historical Origins: Famine Relief Through Public Works

  • During the severe famine of the 1780s, Nawab Asaf-ud-Daula initiated the construction of the Bara Imambara in Lucknow.

  • This project became an early example of the idea that the state must provide work instead of charity during distress.

Post-Independence Innovation: Maharashtra’s Employment Guarantee Model

  • In the mid-1960s, Gandhian leader Vitthal Sakharam Page launched an employment program in Tasgaon.

  • This experiment evolved into Maharashtra’s Employment Guarantee Scheme (EGS) in 1969, proving that job guarantees could work even in drought-prone regions.

Legal Recognition of Employment as State Obligation

  • Maharashtra passed the Employment Guarantee Act (1978), formally recognizing employment as a public responsibility.

  • This marked a major step in India’s social protection history.

Key Features of the Maharashtra EGS

  • Work was offered at below-market wages, ensuring only the genuinely unemployed participated.

  • Equal wages were paid to women and men, a progressive measure for rural labor markets.

  • Works included:

    • Land leveling

    • Digging wells

    • Percolation tanks

    • Soil conservation

Economic and Social Impact

  • Reduced distress migration during droughts.

  • Created durable local rural assets.

  • Set a wage floor, reducing dependence of laborers on landlords and shifting local power relations.

Financing Innovation: Profession Tax

  • When the Centre initially denied famine relief assistance, Page proposed funding through a dedicated tax on urban salaried workers.

  • This led to the profession tax, earmarked for EGS.

From State Model to National Scheme: MGNREGS

  • The MGNREGS (2005) expanded the Maharashtrian model nationwide.

  • It functions as a form of unemployment insurance and reflects the state’s role as an employer of last resort.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • MGNREGS: National program guaranteeing wage employment.

  • EGS (Maharashtra): First major state-level employment guarantee experiment.

  • Bara Imambara: Example of famine-time public works in pre-colonial India.

Issue + Causes

  • Chronic rural distress due to droughts, famines, and unemployment.

  • Need for state intervention through public works.

Benefits

  • Income security

  • Asset creation

  • Reduced migration

  • Women’s workforce participation

Challenges

  • Limited share in total rural employment

  • Fiscal and administrative constraints

  • Implementation inefficiencies

Relevant Mains Points:

Conceptual Clarity

  • Social Protection: Policies ensuring economic security for vulnerable groups.

  • Employment guarantee as a proxy for unemployment insurance in rural India.

Polity & Governance Linkages

  • Rooted in the Directive Principles emphasizing welfare responsibility of the state.

  • Shows evolution of India’s welfare state from famine works to rights-based entitlements.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen MGNREGS implementation and timely wage payments.

  • Expand asset quality and climate-resilient works.

  • Explore integration with broader unemployment insurance frameworks.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS 1 (History/Post-Independence): Evolution of famine relief and welfare schemes

  • GS 2 (Polity): Rights-based legislation, state obligations

  • GS 3 (Economy): Employment generation, rural distress mitigation

  • Prelims: EGS, MGNREGS, social protection measures

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