The
last decade is marked by the dominance of deflationary macroeconomic
policies and falling public development expenditure. Because of this,
an unparalleled and comprehensive crisis has taken firm root in rural
India, resulting in impoverishment, food shortages and hunger. The per
capita availability of foodgrains has fallen to levels that were seen
last during the worst years of colonial rule and famines, an important
reason for which is the declining agricultural growth rate. However,
fall in production is only one reason, the other is the fall in purchasing
power due to the contraction of the public works programmes and employment
generation activities of the state. Farm incomes too have fallen due
to rising input costs and a simultaneous fall in prices as well as withdrawal
of the state from credit, extension services, procurement, price support
and infrastructure. Indebtedness and land alienation has grown, particularly
amongst small and marginal farmers.
Workforce
participation rates in rural areas have declined, more for rural women
than men. There is a growing gender-based dualism in rural labour, with
feminisation of lowly paid menial and arduous work, accompanied by a
faster overall decline in women's employment in the post-reform phase,
from 1.41 to a mere 0.15 per cent between 1983-1993 and 1994-2000. The
Planning Commission reports a fall in employment growth from 2.04 per
cent during 1983-94 to 0.98 per cent during 1994-2000 largely on account
of agriculture and community social and personal services, which together
account for seven-tenth of total employment. Even though this was accompanied
by a deceleration in the rate of growth of labour force from 2.29 per
cent in 1987-94, to 1.03 per cent in 1993-2000, unemployment has grown
since labour force growth outstrips the growth of employment. The extreme
manifestations of this distress are the unabated starvation deaths and
peasant suicides.
The Lok Sabha elections earlier this year saw the people of this country
overwhelmingly reject neo-liberal policies. Despite their commitment
to liberalization-globalization-privatization, it has become clear to
the Congress that an Employment Guarantee Act (EGA) and revival of agriculture
is aare political necessity. necessities. Towards this, the central
government has prepared a draft Employment Guarantee Bill that is expected
to be tabled in Parliament next month. However, there are already voices
in government and outside who are opposing an EGA. Additionally, there
are a number of problems with the Draft itself. What is clear is that
there are strong forces at work that will try to prevent the passage
of the Act itself, or reduce it to a formality by diluting it substantially.
Thus, even though the Common Minimum Programme has opened up the space
for a reversal of some neo-liberal policies, there is little room for
complacency.
With this in mind, SAHMAT organized a Convention to reaffirm the centrality
of an EGA, and to outline the framework of an effective act, which promotes
the interests of working men and women and ensures that state governments
can implement the act without an additional financial burden. The political
leaders, activists and academics who spoke included Jairam Ramesh, Sitaram
Yechury, Sehba Farooqi, D.Raja, Prabhat Patnaik, Aruna Roy, Jean Drèze,
Medha Patkar, Arundhati Roy, Suneet Chopra, Sukhdev Thorat, Dunu Roy
and Jayati Ghosh. Brinda Karat chaired the meeting.
Speakers agreed that aside from protecting the rural population from
hunger and destitution, an EGA would also contribute to many other social
objectives, including the creation of durable assets, the protection
of the environment, the empowerment of women, and the slowdown of rural-urban
migration. In addition, there would be strong multiplier effects of
such employment, which would therefore have a positive effect upon rural
livelihoods, which would be much larger than the actual expenditure.
SK Thorat argued that the Act was neither charity nor financially unviable,
and in a demand-constrained system like ours, an increase in purchasing
power will generate growth with equity.
There is an immense political significance of the EGA in the current
regime of neo-liberal economic policies that have undermined employment
opportunities for large sections of the population. The introduction
of such an Act in the current climate is therefore an important avenue
for mass mobilization and resistance against neo-liberal policies. As
Aruna Roy put it, the Act is a recognition that the state cannot retreat
from pro-poor development and is responsible to ensure livelihood security
and employment. Medha Patkar too emphasized the conflict between different
policies, which becomes stark when the EGA is discussed. In particular,
she spoke of the possibility of the people fighting to regain control
over common property and natural resources through decentralized planning,
and land and water management through the EGA.
One of the biggest lacunae that remain in the Ministry of Rural Development's
Draft is that of sharing the expenditure between the states and the
Centre. The finances of state governments are under severe strain largely
on account of policies beyond their control, including interest rate
policy, access to borrowings, etc. At the same time, most social and
economic development activities and the provision of infrastructure
is the responsibility of the states. Additionally, it is constitutionally
not possible for the central government to impose a financial burden
on the states without conformity Acts being passed in each state assembly,
a procedure likely to cause long delays. In the interest of fiscal federalism,
therefore, the Convention proposed the following: ''The Act should not
impose any additional financial burden on the state governments. The
Employment Guarantee Programme should be fully financed by the Centre...The
wage contribution of the centre must extend at least to a national norm
initially fixed at no less than Rs 66 per day, and indexed to the All
India CPI-AL for future revision. Additionally, the Centre should finance
material costs in the ratio of 70:30 labour : material. When there is
a delay in the devolution of funds to the state government from the
Central Fund, the Central government must reimburse the state government
for the associated unemployment allowance payments. To meet the administrative
costs of the Programme, the funds devolved by the Centre to each state
should include an additional component amounting to 5% of the total
spending on wages and materials.''
The government draft guarantees 100 days of manual unskilled labour
per rural household that registers. A failure to do so within 15 days
of application would make the applicant eligible for an unemployment
allowance of at least a third to half of the wage rate. The second set
of problems relate to the entitlement itself and its restriction to
100 days per family instead of being available to all rural adults.
Brinda Karat (AIDWA) pointed to this and other lacunae in the MoRD draft
where it defines work and household. She argued that 'manual' work often
meant that women would be excluded from it, which was dangerous in the
context of abysmally low levels of poorly paid employment of women in
rural areas surveyed by AIDWA. Furthermore, there should be individual
entitlements, because otherwise women would be excluded. In any case,
she argued that the definition of a household was fraught with difficulties
since the absence of homesteads meant that a number of families shared
the same roof and kitchen. Sehba Farooqi (NFIW) said that every possible
care should be taken to ensure that female-headed households are given
primacy and women are not excluded from the scheme. Towards this, the
Convention proposed that: ''The Act should safeguard the interests of
women and give full attention to their concerns with regard to availability,
location, type and organization of work. In the unfortunate event where
the employment guarantee is restricted to a specified number of days
per household (as proposed in the Common Minimum Programme), it should
be ensured that at least 40 per cent of workers employed in a particular
Block are women, so that women are not pushed disproportionately on
to the unemployment allowance or out of the scheme.''
Most
speakers contested the view expressed by Jairam Ramesh (Congress I),
that there was no contradiction between the policies of liberalization,
privatization and globalization(LPG) on the one hand and the guarantee
of employment on the other. He in fact argued that the real conflict
was between the interests of the unorganized rural workers and the small
section of organized government employees. He said that the Sixth Pay
Commission would erode the very possibility of an EGA since the government
had a financial constraint. In this way, he posed a choice between government
employment and universal employment guarantee.
The EGA is a matter of political will rather than finances. Sitaram
Yechury (CPI-M) argued that the EGA was a non-negotiable and the attempt
to pose the argument in terms of organized versus unorganized was a
red herring. He gave a call to tax the rich, which was the best route
to pursue a pro-poor and growth-oriented development policy. A failure
to do this would erode the legitimacy of the UPA government to remain
in power because it would undermine their mandate. He gave a call to
simultaneously extend the universal guarantee to urban areas. D Raja
(CPI) too wanted the UPA government to recognize the gravity of the
situation on the ground, based on which the Left Parties had originally
asked for a universal guarantee of at least 180 days to be included
in the CMP. He said the issue was not one of finances or requirement
but of the political will to take the EGA forward, so that it does not
remain a mere formality and becomes an effective livelihood guarantee.
Furthermore, the schizophrenic commitment to both deflationary fiscal
policies and an EGA is not sustainable, and Suneet Chopra called for
mobilization to resolve this contradiction in the interest of the working
people.
Jayati Ghosh (JNU) refuted claims that this Act was unaffordable. The
different estimates range between 0.7 and 1.4 per cent of GDP. The mainstream
media and those sections who directly benefited from the policies of
neo-liberalism are playing upon the insecurities of the middle class
by stating that a universal rural employment guarantee will pose an
inordinate tax burden on the middle classes, already burdened by high
consumer price inflation. She pointed to the ''gift'' of Rs. 5000 crores
to a handful of traders at the stock exchange as a result of the dilution
of the turnover tax, which was a simple measure for raising revenue
which should be reinforced. Removal of the capital gains tax was justified
on the basis of the higher turnover tax, but even after retracting on
the turnover tax front, the capital gains tax has not been reintroduced.
So the issue of finding resources is really a political one. She argued
that if the tax-GDP ratio was restored to the 1991 level, there would
be enough money not only for a universal urban and rural employment
guarantee but also enough left over for mid-day meal schemes. Increasing
it slightly would also pay for free universal primary education, etc.
She said that the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Bill was
a dangerous act that ties the hands of the government. She argued that
there was no harm in printing money to finance development schemes,
since this is not inflationary in the current context, with wage goods
and excess foreign exchange reserves available in the system.
The Convention gave a call for the EGA to cover urban areas since the
crisis of livelihoods is large here too. Dunu Roy (Sanjha Manch) argued
that employment opportunities in urban areas are decreasing, subject
to the same forces of liberalisation and globalisation that are ruining
rural economies. Firstly, jobs in the formal sector are not growing
as the emphasis shifts from manufacturing to the services sector. Secondly,
workers are getting thrown out of the formal into the informal sector
through mechanisms of closure, privatisation, voluntary retirement schemes,
and retrenchment. And thirdly, the informal sector is becoming illegalised
through efforts to ''clean'' the ''global'' city.
The Draft Act is mired in all kinds of myths and misunderstandings,
and is even called a 'crackpot' Act, by some of its adversaries. Jean
Drèze presented the main features of the draft Act and tried
to dispel various misgivings surrounding it. He said that the Employment
Guarantee Act is a very practical piece of legislation with potentially
far-reaching economic, social and political implications. He stressed
the need for an Act, and not just a scheme, as a legally enforceable
right to work would give bargaining power to the workers and make the
state accountable. He warned against impending attempts to dilute or
sabotage the draft Act and argued for the immediate enactment of a full-fledged
employment guarantee.
Arundhati Roy put the struggle for an Employment Guarantee Act in the
larger context of resistance against global imperialism. She pointed
out that there was strong opposition to the Employment Guarantee Act
from the corporate media and other privileged interests, because the
Act threatens their game plan for the Indian economy. She reminded the
audience that electoral politics in India was a ''history of broken
promises'' and stressed the need for intensified mobilization.
Prabhat Patnaik (JNU) warned against the forces that militate in different
ways against the provision of an effective EGA. He said that finance
capital stood in direct conflict with any such policy that was non-deflationary
in nature and had the potential of reviving the rural economy and increasing
public expenditure. This he said could happen in three different ways:
one was, openly thwarting the exercise in the name of inadequate funds,
etc. The second was manipulations and machinations that put one group
against another by creating false vested interests like organized versus
unorganized workers, tax payers versus the rural poor, etc. The third
was by the Bretton Woods institutions like the World Bank appropriating
the scheme by offering to fund it against all kinds of conditionalities.
He argued that these attempts should be resisted.