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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PM's address at the Conference
of State Ministers of Rural Development and Panchayati
Raj
September 9, 2009, New Delhi
I am very happy to be here in your midst today
at this very important conference of State Ministers
of Rural Development and Panchayati Raj convened to
discuss the critical issues of employment generation
and providing livelihood, security to our people in
large part s of rural India. I congratulate my colleague,
Dr. C.P. Joshi, the Minister of Rural Development and
Panchayati Raj for taking this timely initiative. We
have now been implementing NREGA for the past five years.
Important lessons can be learnt. There are success stories,
there are indifferent performances in some parts of
our country and the time has come when we should draw
correct lessons from this experience of last five years
to put in place a reform programme which meets the legitimate
aspirations of our rural population.
Of course, we are today meeting at a time when the
monsoons have revived fortunately in most parts of the
country. The rains over the past week augur well for
the kharif crop and have brought cheer to large number
of our farmers. But we have to recognize that most areas
of the country will probably still have deficient rainfall
and therefore we have to redouble our efforts to mitigate
rural distress arising from the after effects of drought.
We had record production and procurement of foodgrains
in both 2007-08 and 2008-09. We thus have adequate food
stocks and there is no cause for concern or fear of
shortages of foodgrains in the country as a whole. I
have however no doubt that we will tackle the situation
effectively and resolutely. Foodgrains supply should
be available in localities where there is deficiency
of production in relation to demand. Also utmost care
ought to be taken to deal with scarcity of fodder and
drinking water.
Further, we have today the means to put purchasing
power in the hands of the rural population. I think
Dr. Amartya Sen, the Noble Laureate economist has repeatedly
emphasized that famines are not necessarily famines
of deficient production but of deficient purchasing
power and for the first time in our history we have
an opportunity to put purchasing power in the hands
of most needy parts of our population through the mechanisms
of National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme.
Both the NREG Programme and the Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar
Yojana are on the whole working well and have created
an effective safety net in rural India. NREGA has put
a floor on rural poverty and it affords a measure of
protection against natural calamities or marketinduced
vulnerability. But as Dr. Joshi has pointed out, the
performance varies from one part of our country to another
and I sincerely hope your Conference will deliberate
on this issue, identify best practices which with modification
can be replicated in other parts of our country.
In 2008-09 under NREG Programme, employment was provided
to nearly 4.5 cr households. Of those employed, nearly
50 percent were women and over 55 percent comprised
of Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes demonstrating
the self-targeting nature of the programme. In the three-and-a-half
years of its implementation, the Central Government
has released over Rs 50,000 cr to the State Governments.
Nearly two-thirds of this amount has been paid as wages
to NREGA workers. In terms of outlays, the Ministry
of Rural Development has the highest priority in our
scheme of things and that is a measure of our commitment
to do all that we can to get rid of chronic poverty,
ignorance and disease which still afflict millions and
millions of people of our country.
Works under NREG Programme are helping to rejuvenate
and revive our natural resource base. I have been told
that over 70 percent of the works under NREGA are related
to water conservation and land development which have
multiple spin off benefits in terms of improved agricultural
productivity and improved water management. Agricultural
productivity is being enhanced. Water assets are thus
being created. Land and soil degradation is being checked.
The programme is also making a contribution to financial
inclusion. State Governments are being encouraged to
make wage payments under the Programme through banks
and post office accounts. Nearly 7.8 cr of such accounts
have been opened. The growing practice of making use
of the financial institutions for disbursement of wages
is one means of reducing leakages and in often ensuring
that wages are paid in accordance with prescribed schedule.
The bargaining power of agricultural labour has increased
as a result of the launching of the NREG Programme.
No longer are they prepared to settle for less than
the notified wage. The average notified wage under NREGA
has itself risen from Rs. 65 per day in 2006-07 to Rs.
87 in 2009-10. We have further committed ourselves to
providing a real wage rate of Rs. 100 under NREGA.
However, the major successes achieved through this
programme should not be a cause for complacency. We
must think creatively, we must think innovatively, we
must anticipate events as they unfold before our eyes.
Therefore, we still have miles to go before we achieve
the full potential of this unique legislation in annals
of recent history. The performance of the programme
as I have mentioned, has been uneven across States.
Some States have shown good results. Some are lagging
behind. I urge them to catch up. We cannot fail the
poor of our country particularly at a time when resources
are available to provide gainful livelihood security
for atleast 100 days to the rural poor.
A Delivery Monitoring Unit has been set up recently
in the Prime Ministers Office to monitor jointly
with the concerned ministries flagship projects such
as NREG Programme. The major difference of this monitoring
process will be that we will put as much data as possible
in the public domain, on the websites of the ministries
concerned. From the right to information, we are moving
towards the rights of the people to expect from the
Government full and complete disclosure. This is in
line with our thinking of moving beyond providing a
right to information to a policy of voluntary disclosure.
Workers on the ground and researchers therefore are
free and should make independent assessments of the
scheme and challenge government data and claims of performance.
We need therefore to shift from input based monitoring,
which can often be self-congratulatory, to independent
evaluation of outcomes.
We propose to establish the institution of an Ombudsman
in every district for effective grievance redressal
under NREG Programme. We should also mobilize public
opinion and use social audits to seek the enforcement
of rights and entitlements created through this landmark
legislation.
Our government has taken a major decision to restructure
and redesign the Swarnajayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana
and convert it into a National Rural Livelihoods Mission.
This new scheme will be implemented in a mission mode.
This Mission will use a multi- pronged strategy for
poverty reduction in a time bound manner by providing
sustainable livelihood through various means to rural
population below the poverty line.
The Ministries of Rural Development and Panchayati
Raj and the State Governments, I sincerely hope will
work in tandem to develop a collective vision for this
Mission. From what I have seen of Dr. Joshis work
since he became my colleague, I have full confidence
that this Ministry will rise to the challenge that lies
ahead. Eventually as the Mission rolls out it should
become the pivot for all our rural poverty reduction
initiatives. The NRLM is intended to achieve the next
level of security, i.e. security of employment assurance
through achievement of its objective of skill development
and promotion of self-employment. We are going to launch
a very ambitious skill development programme and I sincerely
hope it will become an integral component of a programme
to provide gainful livelihood opportunities for our
young people.
The institution of the Self Help Groups in mobilizing
the rural poor has proved to be a potent instrument
of empowerment of the poor. The primary goal of the
Mission should be to saturate mobilization of poor communities
into Self Help Groups in a time bound manner. Investments
in aggregate level peoples institutions like federations
of Self Help Groups is a very important step that will
provide space, voice and resources for the poor. The
National Rural Livelihood Mission should therefore make
dedicated efforts to pilot, to learn and in due course
of time, to scale up such productive partnership between
our people and our Government institutions.
Some states have made significant investment in the
institutional architecture for organizing the rural
poor and making them creditworthy clients for banks
and other financial institutions through capacity building
& training programme. In these states there has
been remarkable progress in terms of creation of assets
for self-employment and providing sustainable livelihood
particularly for our women in rural areas.
Banks operating in rural areas must therefore revisit
their current brick-and-mortar based outreach models.
They have to think creatively and innovatively. ICT
enabled banking services can overcome many of the manpower
constraints and develop new financial products suited
to the needs of people at various levels of development.
We should also explore opportunities for the expansion
of the agency banking concept. Adequate attention should
be paid to organizing the demand side of the credit
delivery by organizing financial literacy and financial
counseling services for the poor.
Investment in skill development and training as I have
said earlier, is a very important area and the Mission
may take steps to make skill development as an entitlement
of the poor.
This years allocation under NREG Scheme is over
Rs.39,000 cr. Under the SGSY it is Rs.2,350 cr. Under
the Rajiv Gandhi National Rural Drinking Water Mission
and the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana, provisions
have been made for Rs.8,000 cr and Rs.18,500 cr respectively
in the current year. Allocations for poverty alleviation
programmes are rising every year. We have now to ensure
that our people get the best value for every rupee spent
on their behalf. Effective oversight of these programmes
is therefore, extremely important.
The panchayat is the best institution to implement
programmes such as NREG Programme. It has been observed
that wherever local bodies are active, functioning well
and are manned by committed people, the delivery is
much better. There is therefore a need to undertake
an intensive campaign for developing skills of Panchayati
Raj Institutions in designing, in planning, in monitoring
and in implementing programmes like NREGA. It should
be our common aim of the Centre and the States to implement
these programmes through the panchayats wherever possible
and feasible. In States where panchayats are not active
or adequately empowered, State Governments, I urge,
should move forward to ensure this outcome.
In conclusion, I wish to assure you that the government
attaches the highest priority to the successful implementation
of these flagship, anti-poverty programmes. We should
work therefore purposefully to improve the quality of
the public system and delivery of public services to
achieve the objectives of spreading, deepening and widening
of rural prosperity and of employment generation. I
trust your deliberations will be guided by our common
national commitment to make rural India the backbone
of our inclusive social and economic growth. I wish
you all success in your deliberations.
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