Recalibrating MGNREGA
The Viksit Bharat Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act (VB-G RAM G), which replaces the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), received the President’s assent on Sunday, 21 December, marking the formal transition to a new rural employment framework. The allegation that these changes amount to the “dismantling” of MGNREGA stems from an unwillingness to distinguish sentiment from performance.
Welfare laws do not enjoy moral immunity because of their vintage or their acronym; they must be assessed by whether they deliver what they promise, at scale, in the conditions that actually obtain rather than those that policymakers nostalgically invoke. The performance and governance gaps in MGNREGA must be studied. The programme’s most basic assurance of guaranteed employment had steadily drifted from its statutory intent. Data from the Ministry of Rural Development show that in FY 2024-25 only about 7-8 per cent of registered households completed the full 100 days of work, while average employment per household remained under 50 days, virtually flat across phases of stress, recovery, and growth. This was not a function of tight budgets as annual allocations had crossed Rs 1 lakh crore in recent years, but of design and delivery failures, where a legal entitlement repeatedly failed to become lived access for most beneficiaries.
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Those gaps were compounded by governance weaknesses. Repeated observations by the Comptroller and Auditor General and social audits documented a pattern of irregularities: inflated muster rolls, payments against........





















Toi Staff
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