The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), also known as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MNREGS), is a piece of Indian legislation passed on August 25th, 2005. The MGNREGA guarantees adult members of any rural household one hundred days of employment each fiscal year if they are willing to do public work-related unskilled manual labor at the statutory minimum wage. The Ministry of Rural Development (MRD) of the Government of India is overseeing the entire implementation of this scheme in collaboration with state governments.
In 2005, India launched a national anti-poverty program known as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, which provided up to 100 days of unskilled manual labor on public works projects per year. However, an impact evaluation of the project revealed that the program did not function as intended, and many people who needed work still did not have it, particularly in the poorest states where it was most needed. The team then looked at data from Bihar, India’s poorest state, to better understand why the program could not provide work as intended. The findings aided local policymakers in developing a new program that enhanced local government’s ability to provide a collection of better and more effective social protection programs for the public.
The Indian government passed the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act in 2005 to provide poor adults with up to 100 days of paid work per year. The program, now known as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, aims to alleviate poverty by providing extra work for those in need and empowerment and insurance when other work sources become insufficient. Much of the evaluation concentrated on Bihar, where more than half of the population is under 25, and nearly 90% live in rural areas.
The Act aims to improve rural livelihood safety by giving every household 100 days of guaranteed wage employment, with adult members volunteering to do unskilled manual labor during a fiscal year.
The Act was first alerted in 200 districts on February 2nd, 2006, but was then lengthened to an additional 130 districts in 2007-2008. (113 districts were notified with effect from April 1st, 2007, and 17 districts in UP were notified from May 15th, 2007). From April 1st, 2008, the remaining districts have been notified under the NREGA. Thus, NREGA applies to the entire country, except for districts with an entirely urban population.
The findings gave the Bihar government a better understanding of its challenges in delivering social protection systems. Policymakers used the findings to create the Bihar Social Protection Project. This World Bank-supported project strengthens the Departments of Social Welfare and Rural Development to better deliver social protection programs and services to the state’s poorest and most vulnerable citizens.
To determine the program’s national impact, researchers examined household-level data from India’s National Sample Survey from 2009 to 2010. They also used the data to understand better how effective the program is at reaching India’s rural poor, particularly backward castes, tribes, and women. Researchers used a randomized control trial to study the effects of an awareness intervention in Bihar—a fictional movie about finding work under the program—on people’s understanding of the program and participation rates.
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