Social Security Policy Support (SSPS) Programme

An initiative of the Cabinet Division and the General Economics Division (GED), Bangladesh Planning Commission, Government of Bangladesh
spot_img

Does India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme Guarantee Employment

In 2005 India introduced an ambitious national antipoverty program, now called the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. The program offers up to 100 days of unskilled manual labor per year on public works projects for any rural household member who wants such work at the stipulated minimum wage rate. The aim is to dramatically reduce poverty by providing extra earnings for poor families, as well as empowerment and insurance. If the program worked in practice the way it is designed, then anyone who wanted work on the scheme would get it. However, analysis of data from India’s National Sample Survey for 2009/10 reveals considerable un-met demand for work in all states. The authors confirm expectations that poorer families tend to have more demand for work on the scheme, and that (despite the un-met demand) the self-targeting mechanism allows it to reach relatively poor families and backward castes. The extent of the un-met demand is greater in the poorest states—ironically where the scheme is needed most. Labor-market responses to the scheme are likely to be weak. The scheme is attracting poor women into the workforce, although the local-level rationing processes favor men.

Latest

Workshop on Capacity Building and Stocktaking of National Social Insurance Scheme (NSIS) in Bangladesh

Date: 19-20 February 2025Venue: Hotel InterContinental, Dhaka, Bangladesh Universal social...

Disability Rights Landscape In Bangladesh-Draft

View Document The three-day residential workshop on the disability rights...

Breaking Barriers

The Journey of Women Overcoming Violence and Hardship View Document Every...

Bangladesh: Observance of International Day of Persons with Disabilities 2024 (Draft)

View Document The event is co-organized by the Bangladesh UNRC...