| PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Discuss the merits and demerits of the four ‘Labour Codes’ in the context of labour market reforms in India. What has been the progress so far in this regard?Linkage: The PYQ examines labour reforms and wage regulation, directly linking to issues of minimum wages, labour protection, and state role highlighted in MGNREGA wage suppression. It helps analyse how policy design and implementation gaps can weaken labour welfare outcomes. |
Mentor’s Comment
The debate on how wages are fixed under MGNREGA has grown with the proposed VB-GRAM Act, which still keeps wage control with the Centre despite clear problems in the system. For the first time, MGNREGA wages are lower than the legal minimum wages in most states, going against its aim of providing basic livelihood security. Wages have remained almost stagnant in real terms since 2009, while gaps and leakages have increased, showing a serious policy failure affecting labour rights and the rural economy.
Why are wage rates central to employment guarantee schemes?
- Wage Incentive: Determines worker participation; higher wages boosted early MGNREGA success.
- Cost Control Tool: Enables governments to restrict programme expansion via suppressed wages.
- Programme Sustainability: Directly influences rural demand and labour market tightening.
How has wage determination evolved under MGNREGA?
- Section 6(1) Centralisation: Empowers Centre to notify wages; states marginalised.
- Initial State Autonomy (Pre-2009): State minimum wages applied; higher rural wages ensured popularity.
- Shift in 2009: Centre notified ₹100/day wage; marked beginning of wage moderation.
- Indexation Limitation: Wages linked to CPI-AL but not aligned with actual minimum wages.
What are the consequences of the real-wage freeze since 2009?
- Real Wage Decline: Wages frozen in real terms post-2009; growth only inflation-adjusted.
- Below Minimum Wage Levels: By 2025-26, MGNREGA wages are often lower than agricultural minimum wages.
- Labour Market Distortion: Weakens rural bargaining power; reduces scheme attractiveness.
- Gender Wage Gap Evidence: MGNREGA wages ~60% (men) and ~75% (women) of agricultural wages (2014 Labour Bureau data).
How has wage suppression affected implementation and outcomes?
- Delayed Payments: Frequent delays due to Aadhaar-based Payment System and NMMS issues.
- Non-payment Instances: Technical failures leading to unpaid wages.
- Discouragement Effect: Workers lose interest; participation declines.
- Leakages Increase: Gap between official and actual employment reflects corruption rise.
Why is the gap between official data and ground reality significant?
- Data Discrepancy: Official employment data shows stability; surveys indicate decline.
- PLFS Evidence: Suggests lower employment levels compared to early implementation years.
- Leakage Indicator: Growth gap reflects systemic inefficiencies and corruption.
What are the key concerns associated with the VB-GRAM Act?
- No Structural Reform: Lacks provisions for timely wage payments or anti-corruption mechanisms.
- Central Control Retained: Continues Centre’s power to fix wages under Section 10.
- Contradiction with Federal Logic: Wage burden shared 60:40, but states lack control.
- Non-obstante Clause Issue: Allows overriding Minimum Wages Act, enabling sub-minimum wages.
What reforms are suggested to correct wage distortions?
- Minimum Wage Alignment: Ensures wages ≥ state minimum wages.
- Decentralised Wage Setting: Transfers power to states.
- Legal Consistency: Removes non-obstante clause overriding Minimum Wages Act.
- Automatic Revision Mechanism: Introduces transparent wage revision formula.
Conclusion
MGNREGA’s credibility as a rights-based welfare programme is weakening due to persistently low wages, delayed payments, and excessive central control. Without aligning wages to statutory minimum levels, restoring state autonomy, and ensuring timely and transparent payments, the scheme risks becoming ineffective. Strengthening its design is essential to uphold labour dignity, rural livelihoods, and inclusive growth.
