Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Nature of the Policy Shift
- 3 Key Structural Changes
- 4 Implications of 60:40 Funding Split
- 5 Impact on Cooperative Federalism
- 6 60-Day Agricultural Pause: Policy Rationale
- 7 Impact on Statutory Employment Guarantee
- 8 Labour Market and Wage Effects
- 9 Governance and Implementation Concerns
- 10 Way Forward
- 11 Conclusion
Introduction
MGNREGA, covering over 8.6 crore job cards, has functioned as a rights-based safety net; the VB-G RAM G Bill, 2025 marks a paradigm shift toward shared financing and centrally managed employment.
Nature of the Policy Shift
- Rights-based to Scheme-based Framework: MGNREGA created a legal entitlement to work; VB-G RAM G redefines it as a centrally sponsored programme.
- Demand-driven to Allocation-driven: Labour budgets based on demand are replaced by “normative allocation” decided by the Centre.
Key Structural Changes
- Guaranteed Days of Employment: Increase from 100 to 125 days, but practical access remains constrained.
- Joint Financing Model: Centre–State funding at 60:40 (90:10 for special category States).
- Seasonal Pause Clause: Mandatory 60-day suspension during peak agricultural seasons.
Implications of 60:40 Funding Split
- Fiscal Stress on States: States face an estimated additional burden of ₹30,000–50,000 crore annually amid shrinking fiscal space.
- GST and Revenue Constraints: Post-GST regime and cess-based transfers limit states’ autonomous revenues.
- Unequal Capacity Across States: Poorer, high-demand states like Bihar and Rajasthan risk under-provisioning of work.
- Moral Hazard in Federalism: Centre claims policy credit while shifting expenditure responsibility downward.
Impact on Cooperative Federalism
- Erosion of State Autonomy: Normative allocation caps state spending even when demand rises.
- Departure from Fiscal Federal Norms: Earlier full wage support by the Centre recognised asymmetric state capacities.
- Risk of Regional Inequality: States with stronger finances may sustain employment; others may ration work.
60-Day Agricultural Pause: Policy Rationale
- Labour Availability for Agriculture: Aimed at preventing farm labour shortages during sowing and harvesting.
- Alignment with Rural Livelihood Cycles: Seeks convergence between public works and private agriculture.
Impact on Statutory Employment Guarantee
- Effective Reduction in Work Window: 125-day guarantee shrinks to around 65 operational days in practice.
- Violation of Demand-driven Principle: Workers cannot seek employment during notified pause periods.
- Regional Inflexibility: Diverse agro-climatic calendars make a uniform pause impractical.
- Adverse Impact on Landless Labourers: Forced dependence on private landlords may depress bargaining power and wages.
Labour Market and Wage Effects
- Downward Pressure on Agricultural Wages: Public employment historically set a wage floor; its suspension weakens this effect.
- Reduced Worker Choice: Public works cease to be an alternative livelihood during critical months.
- Evidence from Past Studies: NSS and ILO studies show MGNREGA raised rural wages, especially for women and SC/ST workers.
Governance and Implementation Concerns
- Centralised Planning Tools: GIS-based plans and national infrastructure stacks reduce local discretion.
- Digital Exclusion Risks: Biometric and tech failures may exclude the poorest workers.
- Weakened Panchayati Raj Role: Gram Sabha primacy diluted in favour of top-down templates.
Way Forward
- Restore Demand-driven Guarantees: Employment ceilings should be flexible and locally responsive.
- Reconsider Funding Responsibilities: Wage costs should remain a central obligation.
- Context-specific Agricultural Adjustments: Seasonal pauses, if any, must be optional and region-specific.
- Strengthen Federal Consultation: States must be equal partners in rural employment design.
Conclusion
As Amartya Sen notes in Development as Freedom, social security enhances agency; diluting employment guarantees risks converting a right into a rationed privilege, weakening both equity and federal trust.


