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Breaking new ground: women’s employment in India’s NREGA, the pandemic lifeline

Narayan, Swati
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2022-08-31
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Journal article
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31
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<html> <head> <title></title> </head> <body> <p>India&#8217;s National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA), in the last 15 years, has evolved as the world&#8217;s largest employer of the last resort. This social protection, specifically designed as a demand-driven automatic employment stabiliser to enable households to cope with livelihood shocks, offers 100 days of guaranteed wage employment in a financial year to all rural households. The budget for this unique legislative entitlement in a developing country was nearly doubled from US$8 billion in 2019&#8211;20 to $15 billion in 2020&#8211;21 to partially offset the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns. After the first pandemic wave, NREGA provided employment to 76 million households &#8211; more than a third of all rural Indian families. Even though women have consistently worked more than half the NREGA person-days annually, in the midst of the pandemic women&#8217;s share of employment declined by 2 per cent in 2020&#8211;21. However, this may have been a temporary decrease due to the unprecedented mass reverse exodus of urban migrants to their rural villages. Still, state-level analysis in this research highlights the persistent under-utilisation of NREGA by women in the poorer states of the Indo-Gangetic plain. On the other hand, the southern states have higher participation of women due to a combination of factors including better human development outcomes, higher wages, and sometimes better child-care facilities at worksites, which are necessary nationwide remedies. In particular, in the state of Kerala the novel integration of the government-initiated Kudumbashree community self-help women&#8217;s groups with NREGA has led to the feminisation of the programme. This convergence provides important insights on the significance of women&#8217;s participation in the decentralised management of NREGA to dilute both gender-intensive and gender-exclusive barriers, which could be fruitfully replicated nationwide.</p> </body> </html>
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English
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Gender & Development
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A Gender-Responsive Recovery: Ensuring Women’s Decent Work and Transforming Care Provision
Volume
30
Issue
2
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1355-2074
EISSN
1364-9221
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