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Besides the welfare schemes, India needs deft management of inflation and unemployment to serve the poor and the underprivileged sections of the society. Discuss.

The Indian Constitution envisions a Welfare State under the DPSP (Articles 36-51), mandating the State to ensure social, economic, and political justice through equitable development. However, impact is undermined by macroeconomic instability, particularly high inflation (8%) and unemployment (6-8%).

Welfare Schemes

Financial Inclusion

PM Jan Dhan Yojana -55 Cr accounts opened

Aadhaar -1.35 Billion generated

Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) -minimizes leakages.

Social Security Nets

Atal Pension Yojana for unorganised sector workers.

PM Maan Dhan Yojana -old-age income security

Food Security

Atal Kalyan Yojana / PMGKAY – 67% population covered

Mid-Day Meal (PM Poshan)

Support for Vulnerable Sections

PM Matru Vandana Yojana

Ayushman Bharat

Skills and Training

PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY)

‘Earn While You Learn’ Scheme

Social Infrastructure

Swachh Bharat Mission

Ujjwala Yojana -10 Cr LPG connections

Gram Sadak Yojana

Women and SC-ST empowerment

PM Mudra Yojana

Stand-Up India

The Impact of Inflation on the Poor

Erosion of Real Income: Inflation disproportionately affects low-income households as food and fuel form over 50% of their consumption basket.

Reduced Effectiveness of Welfare Schemes: High prices diminish the real value of cash transfers under DBT or PM-Kisan.

Rural Distress: Inflation widens the rural-urban gap, as agricultural incomes lag behind input costs (fertilizer, diesel).

Fiscal Stress: Rising subsidy bills due to inflation crowd out developmental spending.

Unemployment and Its Consequences for the Poor

Jobless Growth: Despite 7%+ GDP growth, unemployment among youth remains 17.3% (PLFS 2022-23).

Informalisation: Around 90% of India’s workforce remains in the informal sector, lacking job security or social protection.

Poverty Persists12.9% Indians still multidimensionally poor (NITI Aayog, 2023).

Gender Disparity: Female LFPR, though improved to 41% (2022-23), still trails male LFPR (78%) and Global Average (48%)

Welfare Dependency: Lack of stable income pushes people to rely on welfare transfers, which creates fiscal burden and undermines self-reliance.

Policy Measures for Deft Management

Inflation Management:

Strengthen Monetary-Fiscal Coordination between RBI and Ministry of Finance.

Build food supply buffers via eNAM and cold chain networks.

Promote energy transition to reduce import-driven inflation.

Employment Generation:

Expand PM Vishwakarma, PMEGP, and Start-Up India for entrepreneurship.

Promote labour-intensive sectors – textiles, food processing, tourism. (Economic Survey)

Urban MGNREGA to reduce urban poverty

Invest in green and digital jobs through the IndiaAI Mission and National Green Hydrogen Mission.

Integrate Skill India with industry demand mapping.

Capability Approach: increase expenditure on Health (2.5% of GDP) and Education (6% of GDP)

Only by aligning macro-economic management with social justice objectives can India realise the vision of “Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas”