[The Modi government is finally getting some flak, as it should, for its
confused economic policies, epitomised by the demonetisation blunder last
year. Despite relatively favourable circumstances (including good monsoons
and a decline in international fuel prices), the rate of economic growth is
declining quarter after quarter. For manufacturing, it is even close to
zero, according to the latest estimates. Statistics related to employment
and wages are even more worrying. To illustrate, one of the most telling -
and least noticed - macroeconomic indicators today is the stagnation of
real wages: according to the Labour Bureau's Wage Rates in Rural India
(WRRI) series, ably analysed by Yoshifumi Usami among others, the wages of
agricultural labourers in rural areas have remained more or less constant
in real terms during the last three years. So much for inclusive growth.
Having said this, it is in the field of social policy that the failures of
the central government are most glaring. For instance, there have been no
initiatives of any significance in the fields of education and health
during the last three years. Health policy, in particular, has been a
subject of deep confusion. Three years ago, the government was making grand
promises about universal health care and even health becoming a fundamental
right. Nothing has come of them.]

http://www.ndtv.com/opinion/modi-government-gives-shock-treatment-to-social-policy-1747767?site=full

Modi Government Gives Shock Treatment To Social Policy

Jean Dreze

Published: September 11, 2017 11:11 IST

The Modi government is finally getting some flak, as it should, for its
confused economic policies, epitomised by the demonetisation blunder last
year. Despite relatively favourable circumstances (including good monsoons
and a decline in international fuel prices), the rate of economic growth is
declining quarter after quarter. For manufacturing, it is even close to
zero, according to the latest estimates. Statistics related to employment
and wages are even more worrying. To illustrate, one of the most telling -
and least noticed - macroeconomic indicators today is the stagnation of
real wages: according to the Labour Bureau's Wage Rates in Rural India
(WRRI) series, ably analysed by Yoshifumi Usami among others, the wages of
agricultural labourers in rural areas have remained more or less constant
in real terms during the last three years. So much for inclusive growth.

Having said this, it is in the field of social policy that the failures of
the central government are most glaring. For instance, there have been no
initiatives of any significance in the fields of education and health
during the last three years. Health policy, in particular, has been a
subject of deep confusion. Three years ago, the government was making grand
promises about universal health care and even health becoming a fundamental
right. Nothing has come of them.

When it comes to social security, there have been some initiatives, but
mostly of a misguided sort. As things stand, social security for the
informal sector in India builds on five critical programmes: the National
Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA); the public distribution system
(PDS); the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS); midday meals for
school children; and pensions for widows, the elderly and disabled persons.
All these programmes have suffered important setbacks during the last few
years.

The NREGA came under attack as soon as the Modi government came to power.
Initially, the government tried to restrict the programme to the country's
poorest districts. When that turned out to be difficult to get away with,
caps were imposed on NREGA expenditure, leading to an unprecedented crash
(30 per cent or so) in NREGA employment in 2015-16, along with mounting
arrears in wage payments. More recently, the central government seems to
have accepted that NREGA is there to stay, and financial allocations have
even picked up a little bit. Yet, attacks on the programme continue. The
recent committee report on NREGA wages, for instance, argues not only
against the payment of minimum wages, but also in favour of NREGA wages
being held constant over time in real terms. If accepted, this
recommendation is likely to lead to the entire programme being gradually
phased out, as labourers themselves lose interest.

Turning to the PDS, the system did improve in many states (especially the
poorest states) during the last few years as the National Food Security Act
was rolled out. These gains, however, are in danger of being undone by the
imposition of Aadhaar-based Biometric Authentication (ABBA) on the PDS.
There is growing evidence that ABBA has already done much damage in
Rajasthan and Jharkhand. Official data for Ranchi district, where ABBA has
been compulsory for more than a year, shows that about 20 per cent of
cardholders have been excluded from the PDS month after month since
January. The situation is likely to be worse in other districts, where
there are serious connectivity problems. In spite of these and other
indications that ABBA is inappropriate technology for much of rural India,
the central government continues to promote it blindly.

As far as ICDS and midday meals are concerned, both schemes received shock
treatment in the Union Budget 2015-16, in the form of severe budget cuts -
36 per cent for midday meals and more than 50 per cent for ICDS (partly
reversed later on under public pressure). While the cuts were sought to be
justified on the grounds that state governments were due to receive a
higher share of the indivisible pool of taxes, it is a mystery why the axe
fell so heavily on children. Both programmes are yet to recover from this
setback. The allocation for midday meals in this year's Union Budget, Rs.
10,000 crores, is still 25 per cent lower in money terms than the
corresponding allocation four years ago - in real terms, the decline would
be even larger.

Last but not least, the central government is undermining social security
pensions for widows, the elderly and disabled persons. The central
contribution to old-age pensions has stagnated at an abysmal Rs. 200 per
month since 2006, even as the salaries and pensions of government employees
went up by leaps and bounds. Instead of expanding non-contributory pension
programmes, which are of great value to some of India's most vulnerable
groups, the central government is promoting contributory programmes such as
the Atal Pension Yojana (APY). The modalities of this programme are of
little use to destitute widows or elderly couples, who have shown little
interest in it.

This brief overview would be incomplete without a few words about maternity
entitlements. All Indian women (except those covered by maternity benefits
in the formal sector) have been entitled to maternity benefits of Rs. 6,000
per child since 2013 under the National Food Security Act. This legal right
has been brazenly violated by the central government for more than four
years. This year, the Union Budget finally made a modest allocation of Rs.
2,700 crores for maternity benefits. State governments were also told, at a
consultation held on February 22, 2017, that arrangements would be made for
maternity benefits to be paid with retrospective effect from January 1,
2017. But none of this has happened so far. In an affidavit submitted to
the Supreme Court on April 2, 2017, the Ministry of Women and Child
Development made the lame statement that "the implementation guidelines are
being drafted". More recently, the central government instructed the state
governments to restrict maternity benefits to one child per woman, showing
once again its disregard for the law.

The silver lining is that there is no sign of a similar abdication at the
state level - at least not yet. In fact, the slow but steady trend towards
more active social policies has continued in many states during the last
three years. However, there is a danger that the centre's indifference (if
not hostility) towards social policy will soon percolate to some state
governments as well. This prospect is no less worrying than the slowing
down of economic growth, considering the vital role that social support
plays in the lives of the poor.

(The author is Visiting Professor at the Department of Economics, Ranchi
University.)



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