Context:
The Union Government has introduced the Viksit Bharat Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill, 2025 (VB-G RAM G) to replace the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), 2005. Passed in Parliament on December 18 amid opposition protests, the move represents a major shift from a rights-based, demand-driven employment guarantee to a more centralised, supply-driven framework, raising concerns over rural livelihood security and federal burden-sharing.
Key Highlights:
MGNREGA: Background and Significance:
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Enacted in 2005, MGNREGA guarantees:
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100 days of unskilled wage employment annually to every rural household.
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Wage rates vary by State and are linked to minimum wage norms.
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Currently has 12.61 crore active workers, with women forming over half of the workforce.
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Unique for its universal and legal entitlement-based nature, available irrespective of caste or BPL status.
Origins of the Employment Guarantee:
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Proposed by the National Advisory Council (NAC) in 2004 as a social protection measure.
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Though the draft was initially diluted, civil society mobilisation and Parliamentary Standing Committee intervention restored key provisions, making it a landmark rights-based welfare law.
Government’s Rationale for Replacement:
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The government claims the new Bill addresses deficiencies such as:
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Corruption
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Misuse of funds
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Inefficiencies in implementation
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However, MGNREGA already has:
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Social audit mechanisms
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Transparent IT-based monitoring
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Legal accountability for work demand and wage payments
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Key Changes Under VB-G RAM G Bill:
Shift from Demand-driven to Supply-driven Model:
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MGNREGA: Work must be provided when demanded by households.
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VB-G RAM G: Allocations will be capped and determined by the Centre, weakening the employment guarantee.
Increased Financial Burden on States:
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State contribution rises from 10% to 40%, altering fiscal federalism.
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Poorer States may reduce project approvals due to higher costs, suppressing demand.
Greater Central Control:
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Implementation authority shifts more towards the Union government, reducing Panchayat-level autonomy.
Workdays Increased but Conditional:
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Guaranteed workdays increased from 100 to 125 days, but with:
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Allocation limits
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New restrictions like blackout periods
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Blackout Period Introduced:
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Programme may be paused during peak agricultural seasons.
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Departure from MGNREGA’s continuous availability, reducing its role as a safety net during distress periods.
Social Justice Concerns:
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Studies show MGNREGA significantly benefited:
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Dalit and Adivasi households
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Rural poor during lean seasons
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Migrant workers during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Replacement could weaken livelihood security and democratic accountability.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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MGNREGA (2005): Legal right to 100 days of rural wage employment.
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Demand-driven Scheme: Resources provided based on beneficiary demand.
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Supply-driven Scheme: Government decides allocations and availability.
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Active Workforce: 12.61 crore workers, majority women.
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VB-G RAM G Bill: Raises workdays to 125, increases State share to 40%.
Relevant Mains Points:
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Keywords & Conceptual Clarity:
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Right to Work, Social Protection, Fiscal Federalism, Decentralised Governance
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Governance Issues:
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Centralisation vs Panchayati Raj empowerment
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Accountability shift from citizens’ right to State discretion
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Way Forward:
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Strengthen social audits and transparency instead of repeal
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Ensure adequate Centre funding support
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Retain demand-driven guarantee for rural distress mitigation
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Balance reform with constitutional commitment to social justice
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2: Governance, welfare state, Centre–State relations, social justice
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GS 3: Rural economy, employment generation, inclusive growth
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Prelims: MGNREGA provisions, scheme frameworks
