Open Letter To MoRD, NREGA Sangharsh Morcha (English)

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NREGA Sangharsh Morcha

Twitter: @NREGA_Sangharsh
Facebook: @NREGASangharshMorcha
Email: [email protected]

13 February 2023

Open letter of NREGA Sangharsh Morcha to the Ministry of Rural Development


Dear Sir/Madam,
NREGA Sangharsh Morcha is a coalition of organisations working with rural labourers, including
NREGA workers, around the country. On 8 February 2023, the Ministry of Rural Development
released a detailed statement on NREGA in response to queries from Indiaspend. From this
statement, it appears that the Ministry is in denial of the ground realities of NREGA. The
following claims are particularly misleading:
1. There is no unmet demand for NREGA work. (“During current FY 2022-23, a total of
99.81% rural households have been offered wage employment against their demand for
work.”)
2. This year’s Budget allocation of Rs 60,000 crore for NREGA is adequate since
supplementary funds are usually provided later in the year to meet the demand for work.
3. Wages are paid on time. (“As on 7.2.2023 payments generated within 15 days is
95.97%.”)
4. The NMMS digital-attendance App is working smoothly, “technical issues are being
resolved on real time basis” and “no major issue has been reported in its
implementation”.
We respond to this point by point:
1. What passes for “work demand” in NREGA’s Management and Information System (MIS)
can by no means be interpreted as an indicator of the full demand for work. It is only a
record of formal requests that may or may not have been submitted by workers
themselves. More often, these digital requests are just a formality fulfilled by the
implementing agency or middlemen. Independent surveys show that the real demand
for work is much larger (see e.g. Azim Premji University 2022). Many households would
like more NREGA work but they don’t know how to apply, and may not even be aware
that they have a right to apply. In practice, employment generation depends more on the
initiative of state governments and local authorities than on formal work applications.
These initiatives are frustrated when funds are lacking.
2. The Ministry is deceiving the public by claiming that the Budget allocation is adequate
and will be supplemented in good time to meet the demand for work. It knows very well
that the supplementary allocation proves inadequate every year and leads to wage
arrears being carried over to the next financial year (more than Rs 10,000 crore this
year). Meanwhile wage payments are delayed and NREGA works are often held up. If
only to break this vicious circle of under-allocation and mounting arrears (let alone
expand employment), it was important to make a much higher Budget allocation this
year.
3. The claim that wages are paid on time is poetry. The Ministry is careful to mention that
payments are only “generated” within 15 days in most cases, but it knows very well that
wage payments are routinely delayed after the generation of payment orders. Many
recent studies show that payment delays remain the norm rather than exception. For
instance, a careful analysis of 18 lakh wage transactions in the first half of 2021 revealed
that the Centre delayed payment of 44% of the wages beyond 15 days (see also APU
2022). It gets worse in the second half of each year, when funds run out.
4. We strongly dispute the claim that the NMMS digital-attendance App works smoothly.
Wherever we have a presence (Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal and other states), we observe that the mandatory imposition
of this App has caused havoc. In many areas, there have been demonstrations of NREGA
workers against it. We have also circulated many testimonies of NMMS-related problems
on social media (e.g. here, here and here). The claim that “no major issue has been
reported in its implementation” is simply false and contradicts the Ministry’s own
admission that damage-control modifications have been made in response to requests
from state governments. Many NREGA workers today work without being paid because
of technical problems related to the NMMS App – this is a gross violation of their
inalienable right to payment within 15 days.
We are aware that a provision has very recently been introduced for offline uploading of NMMS
attendance and photographs. In our experience, this facility is still not operational in many
areas, when it is known at all to worksite supervisors. But in any case, this is just another
instance where the imposition of an immature and unreliable wage payment system leads to a
long phase of damage-control after so-called “teething problems” emerge, only to be followed
by another problematic innovation. This constant rejigging of payment systems must stop. It is
the Ministry’s responsibility to put in place a reliable and timely payment system once and for
all.
The Ministry’s statement suggests that the Ministry is unable or unwilling to see the ground
realities. We invite senior officials of the Ministry to visit some of the areas where we work and
see the situation for themselves without a priori. Meanwhile, we have launched an indefinite
protest at Jantar Mantar from today, to demand the withdrawal of the NMMS App and a lasting
solution to the persistent problem of delayed and unreliable NREGA wage payments.
Attached is the charter of demands from NREGA Sangharsh Morcha.
Yours sincerely,
NREGA SANGHARSH MORCHA

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