[<<I*A new report released on April 15, 2020, and based on a survey of more
than 11,000 workers by Stranded Workers Action Network, a volunteer group,
said that about 50% only had rations left for less than one person, 74% had
less than Rs 300 left, and 89% had not been paid by their employers at all
during the lockdown. Most of them were daily wage factory/construction
workers. The group was formed to attend to distress calls from migrant
workers after the lockdown.
India is estimated to have some 120 million rural-to-urban migrant workers.
Nearly 92% of the 61 million jobs created over the 22 years post
liberalisation in 1991 have been informal. Moreover, joblessness has risen
sharply in recent years.*
...
Internal migration is not a policy priority in India. The estimates [of its
scale] vary from 10 million to 150 million, which itself shows a lack of
clarity. There are migrants who move for work permanently--usually, from
educated and more privileged groups--and then there are those on the
fringes. The latter migrate temporarily, usually forced to do so by lack of
development or agrarian distress. Labour migration corridors from rural
areas to centres like Delhi or Mumbai represent coping strategies for the
rural poor.
...
However, the decision was taken without enough preparation. The four-hour
notice may have been strategic, but it also showed how badly prepared we
were for the problems that the poor and marginalised are now facing. Timely
measures were not taken at the Centre and in the states to accomodate
people in shelters and provide them food. The system [of governance] should
have been especially sensitive to the needs of the most vulnerable.
...
There are three kinds of migrants now, due to the lockdown: those who have
reached home, those who are still in the places where they work, and those
who are in between, unable to reach their homes. Those stuck in between are
in an unfamiliar place, largely without help and resources like money or
food. Those who are still in the places where they work, at least know
their surroundings and know where to access essentials like food and
healthcare, but are not receiving wages. And those who have managed to get
home after the lockdown are facing stigma. Being jobless, they may have to
borrow from money-lenders at exorbitant interest rates.>>


(Excerpted from sl. no. I. below.)

<<As it becomes clear that the lockdown will go on for quite a while, in a
total or a more localized version, the biggest worry right now, by far, is
that a huge number of people will be pushed into dire poverty or even
starvation by the combination of the loss of their livelihoods and
interruptions in the standard delivery mechanisms. That is a tragedy in
itself and, moreover, opens up the risk that we see large-scale defiance of
lockdown orders — starving people, after all, have little to lose. We need
to do what it takes to reassure people that the society does care and that
their minimum well-being should be secure.
We have the resources to do this; the stocks of food at the Food
Corporation of India stood at 77 million tons in March 2020 — higher than
ever at that time of the year, and more than three times the “buffer stock
norms”. This is likely to grow over the next weeks as the Rabi crop comes
in. The government, recognizing the disruptions to the agricultural markets
from the lockdown, is more than usually active in buying the stocks that
the farmers need to get rid of. Giving away some of the existing stock, at
a time of national emergency, makes perfect sense; any sensible public
accounting system should not portray it as inordinately costly.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. II. below.)

Three economists, of some repute, have jointly penned this comment.]

I/II.
https://www.indiaspend.com/now-is-the-time-to-show-india-cares-about-its-migrants/?fbclid=IwAR10HDNph3NUavDHncHdABPoMVS1OtUgob0dcHIzHJ6Ma1C5gV8OTPtj_34

‘Now Is The Time To Show India Cares About Its Migrants’

Shreehari Paliath
April 15, 2020

Bengaluru: With the government extending the nationwide lockdown until May
3, 2020, millions of migrant workers remain in financial, physical and
emotional distress. This came through graphically in the chaotic scenes
near a railway station in Mumbai on Tuesday, shortly after the Prime
Minister’s announcement, as thousands of workers gathered, some demanding
food, others transport to their villages. Migrant workers in Surat, who
have been protesting since the lockdown began, demanding to be sent home,
also renewed their protests. As IndiaSpend has reported, the ongoing
lockdown to contain COVID-19 has thrown the lives and livelihoods of
millions of such workers into disarray.

According to a home ministry statement on April 5, 2020, some 1.25 million
inter-state migrants are lodged in 27,661 relief camps and shelters, 87%
state-run and the rest operated by NGOs. However, many more are not in
camps. Both inter- and intra-state migrants are stranded without work, with
rapidly dwindling resources, at their places of work or en route to their
homes in rural areas. Those who managed to walk home are confronting both
stigma (for fear they may be infected with COVID-19) and joblessness, while
the village economy is reeling from the abrupt loss of remittances.

A new report released on April 15, 2020, and based on a survey of more than
11,000 workers by Stranded Workers Action Network, a volunteer group, said
that about 50% only had rations left for less than one person, 74% had less
than Rs 300 left, and 89% had not been paid by their employers at all
during the lockdown. Most of them were daily wage factory/construction
workers. The group was formed to attend to distress calls from migrant
workers after the lockdown.

India is estimated to have some 120 million rural-to-urban migrant workers.
Nearly 92% of the 61 million jobs created over the 22 years post
liberalisation in 1991 have been informal. Moreover, joblessness has risen
sharply in recent years.

In an interview with IndiaSpend, Benoy Peter, an expert on internal
migration and executive director of Centre for Migration and Inclusive
Development, a Kerala-based non-profit, says this is the time for India to
show that it cares about its migrant workers and to immediately take
measures such as ensuring food and decent living conditions, testing for
COVID-19, and explaining properly to workers in their own language the
intricacies of this virus. He argues that as the lockdown lifts, state
governments should try to persuade migrant workers, without coercion, and
by understanding their grievances and protecting their livelihoods, to stay
back in urban centres so as to help revive both the urban and rural
economies, to ensure better medical care for themselves in the event that
they are infected with the virus, and to prevent COVID-19 contagion in
rural areas.

“Urban areas,” he says, “must show their preparedness to help them stay
back and work.” Peter also talks about the catastrophic impact of the
lockdown on the informal economy, the future challenges it poses for the
millions of inter- and intra-state migrants, and the strengths and
drawbacks of Kerala’s response to the migrant worker crisis set off by the
lockdown.

Peter, 44, leads a consortium of organisations in India as a contractor to
the International Labour Organization for preparing a policy paper on
internal labour migration in India. He was a member of a working group on
Labour Migration to Kerala formed by the Kerala State Planning Board for
the 13th Five-Year Plan (2017-2022). He was also part of an expert panel
providing technical support to the fourth administrative reforms commission
in refining welfare laws for marginalised populations in Kerala.

Edited excerpts:

*The Prime Minister has been blamed for not addressing the migrant crisis
in his address to the nation on April 14. There have been protests by
migrant workers, and riots, in different parts of the country, including in
Mumbai and Surat. Your thoughts?*

He may not have directly addressed the issue, but he acknowledged that
people have been affected [by the lockdown]. Otherwise he would have to
take the blame.

Essentially, we were not prepared for the lockdown, and I do not think that
people imagined so many migrants existed in urban centres without any
support. The Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation, which is a rich urban body,
reached out to NGOs to provide food. They realised that what happened in
Surat could happen in Ahmedabad.

As a policy issue, internal migration is neglected. Now it has become
visible and shocking to mainstream India.

*Why were migrants overlooked?*

They make the city run but are invisible to the system because there is not
enough data on them and they are not part of the local political economy.
Therefore, local elected representatives do not feel responsible for them.
State governments and urban local bodies were not prepared for the
situation.

[Even in normal times], most migrants have poor access to social welfare
measures or social protection like healthcare or the public distribution
system. Their dignity is compromised when they try to avail of government
services.

Internal migration is not a policy priority in India. The estimates [of its
scale] vary from 10 million to 150 million, which itself shows a lack of
clarity. There are migrants who move for work permanently--usually, from
educated and more privileged groups--and then there are those on the
fringes. The latter migrate temporarily, usually forced to do so by lack of
development or agrarian distress. Labour migration corridors from rural
areas to centres like Delhi or Mumbai represent coping strategies for the
rural poor.

*But isn't it the responsibility of states to take care of migrants right
now? Are migrants the unwitting casualty in a state-Centre tussle?*

No, I do not think this is the case. The [central] home ministry, which is
in charge of disaster management, has issued directions to use the state
disaster relief fund to help migrant workers. NITI Aayog [the Centre’s
policy think-tank] has written to NGOs that are part of its portal to work
with the government. They need NGOs. The government got overwhelmed. The
development sector has a role, which was underplayed.

Migrants are not an unwitting casualty. Any government that is serious
about the economy knows that migrants play a role in our economy. There are
more than 3.5 million people [migrants] in Kerala, and if they go back to
their homes, how will the construction sector survive? States may not have
enough resources and were not prepared.

*What five steps could be taken right now to alleviate the distress
migrants are undergoing?*

Internal migrant labourers, most of them in the informal sector, contribute
to nearly 10% of India’s GDP [gross domestic product]. This is the time to
show to them that we care about them.

Until the end of the lockdown, we need to ensure that they have food and
shelter, and that their health problems are addressed. We need to decongest
their living facilities wherever required. Then, there are vulnerable
groups within migrant groups like the elderly, those with disabilities and
pregnant women, whose needs must be met.

We need active screening of workers using mobile medical units, and must
plan and prepare to isolate workers if they are detected with COVID-19.
Finally, we need to inform them about the disease in their own language and
ensure that they understand it properly.

Governments or local authorities need to go to migrant workers and
understand their grievances, and explain to them what can and cannot be
done under the present circumstances.

*What steps do you suggest once the lockdown is lifted, albeit gradually?
This is the time for migrants to return home for the harvest season, yet
contagion is a real worry, and many migrants may be in dire need of
employment and money.*

We need to mentally prepare them to stay back once the lockdown lifts so
that they will be able to get back to work. Only if they work can their
families receive money, which then gets circulated in the economy,
including the village economy. The impact of this crisis on villages will
be reduced if people can stay back and work in urban areas.

This will also help urban economies revive. The migrants will get better
health facilities and treatment in cities than in villages, and most
importantly, there is a smaller chance of infection travelling from a
COVID-19 hotspot to a village. There are several migrants who would want to
stay back in cities [and earn] because they owe money to a local
money-lender or other local institutions.

At the same time, we need to accept that it is their right to go back and
there should be no coercion. Urban areas must show preparedness to help
them stay and work.

*Had state governments been informed in advance of the March 25 lockdown,
would they have been better prepared for a situation of millions of
migrants trying to get back home?*

A lockdown was inevitable. Our health infrastructure is concentrated in
urban centres. If COVID-19 reaches rural India [on a huge scale] it will be
catastrophic. The only way of arresting the spread of the pandemic was
through prevention and by insulating rural areas.

However, the decision was taken without enough preparation. The four-hour
notice may have been strategic, but it also showed how badly prepared we
were for the problems that the poor and marginalised are now facing. Timely
measures were not taken at the Centre and in the states to accomodate
people in shelters and provide them food. The system [of governance] should
have been especially sensitive to the needs of the most vulnerable.

*Some have commented on how differently migrant workers were treated from
NRIs, who were given more time to come home before the lockdown. Has the
working class been left to bear the brunt of the pandemic in a country
where over 90% of the workforce is in the informal sector?*

Migration is a fundamental right for citizens. Indians are allowed to
travel, work and reside in any part of the country. [But] there has always
been class discrimination. There are international and internal migrants.
The latter belong to socially and economically disadvantaged groups like
adivasis, dalits or religious minorities.

In every disaster, the marginalised are the most affected, among them
migrant workers and refugees. Even within the informal sector, there are
several vulnerable groups. If you are native or a local working in the
informal sector, there are more resources at your disposal, including
support from local governments, than for a rickshaw-puller in Delhi who is
from Bihar, or nomadic groups selling wares in the city. A Rohingya refugee
[from Myanmar] may be worse off than even a migrant worker.

They [dalits, adivasis, religious minorities] are not just marginalised in
the cities, but also in villages. This lockdown has made these historically
invisible internal migrants--such as urban workers and seasonal
labourers--visible to mainstream India and their plight is out in the open
for everyone to see.

*How would you compare the lockdown to demonetisation, which also impacted
workers in the informal sector, many of whom are migrants?*

I fear that the impact of the lockdown will be much worse than that of
demonetisation. Demonetisation took away cash and resulted in the
stagnation of the economy, thereby affecting livelihoods. Demonetisation
led to a drop in total production in the economy. The informal sector was
severely affected due to it, but the formal sector was relatively better
off.

The lockdown has an immediate and direct impact on livelihoods, and will
have long-term impact on everyone, particularly migrant workers. Reduction
in remittances [due to the lockdown and lack of employment and wages] will
not only impact migrant households, but the entire village economy, because
it depends on remittances from migrants, as I said earlier. There could
even be acute malnutrition and starvation deaths. Besides, if there is
wide-scale transmission of COVID-19 in rural areas, it will have a
devastating impact. It could substantially increase rural mortality rates.

For industry, there will be some cushion [from the government], but imagine
the impact on those without access to the public distribution system, those
without a bank account or insurance, or even those who did not even know
what happened [when the lockdown was announced] because they had limited
access to information.

*How do you look at the massive movements of people in the past few days?*

There are three kinds of migrants now, due to the lockdown: those who have
reached home, those who are still in the places where they work, and those
who are in between, unable to reach their homes. Those stuck in between are
in an unfamiliar place, largely without help and resources like money or
food. Those who are still in the places where they work, at least know
their surroundings and know where to access essentials like food and
healthcare, but are not receiving wages. And those who have managed to get
home after the lockdown are facing stigma. Being jobless, they may have to
borrow from money-lenders at exorbitant interest rates.

*China locked down millions in Wuhan. But Sweden and the Netherlands, for
example, did not do so, and nor did Singapore initially, though it has done
so now. India has enforced the largest and perhaps strictest lockdown in
the world. How do you assess these varying approaches to tackling a
pandemic?*

It is a sum total of human development, not just population. Sweden,
Netherlands and Singapore are at a higher level of human development. China
and India are the most populous countries in the world, and have among the
largest migrant populations living abroad.

India [followed by China] receives the highest foreign remittances, and
migration is a way of life. There are even people from Uttar Pradesh and
Andhra Pradesh who work as labourers abroad.

Any change in migration [of China and India] can be felt in the world,
though internal migration [in India] is higher--manifold--than
international migration. Given such a large number of migrants, both China
and India would have had limited control over the dissemination of
infection without a lockdown.

*How has Kerala, which is estimated to have nearly 4 million inter-state
migrant workers (in 2017), handled the volatile situation after the
lockdown was announced, with migrants desperate to go home?*

Kerala was probably better prepared for the lockdown compared to other
states. There is a much more resilient and decentralised response this
time, compared to the state’s response to the 2018 floods and landslides.
Disaster management in Kerala comes under the revenue department, which has
a weak system at the grassroots level, and local self-governments (LSGs)
had a limited role. This time, the LSGs are leading the interventions.

LSGs are very grounded, with gender-balanced political representation from
the locality, and know the area well. Primary health clinics, schools,
anganwadis and animal husbandry are all under the LSGs, which helps in
coordination. Learning from the floods [in August 2018], the government has
understood that mass [relief] interventions must be under LSGs.

*Are there any drawbacks?*

Even in Kerala, migrant workers are experiencing political exclusion. The
sensitivity that exists at the state level (ministers and senior
bureaucrats) is not necessarily evident at the grassroots. The LSGs need to
be sensitised to a greater degree about the problems of migrant workers so
that there is no scope for xenophobia.

In Kerala, there are seven pockets where thousands of migrant workers live
together. Different kinds of workers require different treatment. There are
workers who are attached to employers and others who are foot-loose.
Employers are expected to take care of their workers, but this is not the
case with foot-loose workers. They have no one to turn to other than the
government. Until recently, food distribution was not adequate, and there
was a lack of clarity in instructions from the state government to the
LSGs. Some LSGs made house-owners responsible for providing them with food.
This is not feasible because it is not possible to feed so many people in a
house (which often is the case with migrant workers) three times a day.

The issue in Kottayam [where migrant workers defied the lockdown and
demanded food and transport back to their native places] received attention
in the media. In responding to it, the government appointed a police
officer as a nodal officer though it was not [intrinsically] a law and
order problem. It should ideally have been managed by the social justice
department, labour department and the LSG department.

Further, some of the assurances given to migrants are creating a negative
effect because the locals feel that these workers are being prioritised at
a time when everyone is distressed and frustrated due to the lockdown. So
resentment is being expressed on social media against migrant workers.

Despite all this, at a policy level, at least on paper, Kerala is sensitive
to the requirements of migrant workers. However, by calling them “guest
workers”, the government seems to be reminding them to leave after their
work is finished, which is discriminatory. They have the right to be here.

(Paliath is an analyst with IndiaSpend.)

II.
https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/coronavirus-india-lockdown-economy-amartya-sen-raghuram-rajan-abhijit-banerjee-6364521/?fbclid=IwAR1qN2eCfzrdalYpxo3l5BiDsQuDYOn-x2YBcjJsKjQRa3qR7OkGbYxaa54

‘Huge numbers may be pushed into dire poverty or starvation…we need to
secure them’
Amartya Sen, Raghuram Rajan, Abhijit Banerjee write: The unexpected loss of
income and savings can have serious consequences, even if the meals are
secured for now: farmers need money to buy seeds and fertilizer for the
next planting season; shopkeepers need to decide how they will fill their
shelves again

Written by Amartya Sen , Raghuram Rajan , Abhijit Banerjee |
Updated: April 17, 2020 9:17:34 am

A family of migrant workers walk to their village in rural Maharashtra
through the Mumbai-Pune road.

We in India worry a lot about the possible mis-steps that can happen in the
implementation of large-scale transfers; the money (or the food ) may end
up in the wrong hands, some intermediary may get rich at the expense of the
taxpayer. In some ways, this is a welcome shift from the see-no-evil
optimism that gave us government-run hotels and “luxury” river cruises. But
in times like these, amidst the pandemic and the global economic crisis,
with the nation in lockdown and with lives and livelihoods at stake, it is
the wrong set of concerns.

As it becomes clear that the lockdown will go on for quite a while, in a
total or a more localized version, the biggest worry right now, by far, is
that a huge number of people will be pushed into dire poverty or even
starvation by the combination of the loss of their livelihoods and
interruptions in the standard delivery mechanisms. That is a tragedy in
itself and, moreover, opens up the risk that we see large-scale defiance of
lockdown orders — starving people, after all, have little to lose. We need
to do what it takes to reassure people that the society does care and that
their minimum well-being should be secure.

We have the resources to do this; the stocks of food at the Food
Corporation of India stood at 77 million tons in March 2020 — higher than
ever at that time of the year, and more than three times the “buffer stock
norms”. This is likely to grow over the next weeks as the Rabi crop comes
in. The government, recognizing the disruptions to the agricultural markets
from the lockdown, is more than usually active in buying the stocks that
the farmers need to get rid of. Giving away some of the existing stock, at
a time of national emergency, makes perfect sense; any sensible public
accounting system should not portray it as inordinately costly.

Indeed the government already has shown a willingness to use the stocks —
it has offered a supplementary PDS provision of 5 kg/person/month for the
coming three months. However, it is quite likely that three months will not
be enough, since even if the lockdown ends soon, the process of reopening
the economy will take time. More importantly, a substantial fraction of the
poor are excluded from the PDS rolls, for one reason or another (such as
identification barriers to get a ration card that turn out to be hard to
overcome), and this supplementary provision only applies to those who are
already on it. For example, even in the small state of Jharkhand, there
are, we are told, 7 lakh pending applications for ration cards. There is
also evidence that there are a lot of bona fide applications (for example
of old-age pensioners) held up in the verification process, partly because
the responsible local authorities try to avoid letting anybody in by
mistake to avoid any appearance of malfeasance.

‘There has to be funding available for states, local govts to reach those
who suffer from extreme deprivation’.

Such punctiliousness has its merits, but not in the middle of a crisis. The
correct response is to issue temporary ration cards — perhaps for six
months — with minimal checks to everyone who wants one and is willing to
stand in line to collect their card and their monthly allocations. The cost
of missing many of those who are in dire need vastly exceeds the social
cost of letting in some who could perhaps do without it.

This principle, once recognized, has a number of important implications.
First, the government should use every means at its disposal to make sure
that no one is starving. This means expanding the PDS, as discussed, but it
also means setting up public canteens for migrants and others who are away
from home, sending the equivalent of the school meal to the homes of the
children who are now stuck at home (as some states are already doing), and
making use of reputed local NGOs that often have a reach among the most
marginalized that exceeds that of the government.

Second, starvation is just one of the worries; the unexpected loss of
income and savings can have serious consequences, even if the meals are
secured for now: farmers need money to buy seeds and fertilizer for the
next planting season; shopkeepers need to decide how they will fill their
shelves again; many others have to worry how they would repay the loan that
is already due. There is no reason why, as a society, we should ignore
these concerns.

If there was ever a challenge that requires brave and imaginative action,
this has to be it.

The government has partly recognized this in the cash transfers it has
promised to certain groups; but the amounts are both small and narrowly
targeted. Why only farmers and not landless labourers, especially since
MGNREGA is hobbled by the lockdown? And help needs to be extended to the
urban poor. Once again, the priority should be to err on the side of being
inclusive. P Chidambaram’s idea of using the MGNREGA rolls from 2019, plus
those covered by Jan Arogya and Ujjwala to identify the poor households and
to send them 5000 rupees each to their Jan Dhan accounts, seems like a good
first step. But we must recognize that none of these lists are perfect and
moreover the recent work of Rohini Pande, Karthik Muralidharan and others
have exposed the many gaps in the JAM infrastructure in terms of reaching
the very poor. Therefore, as a part of the commitment to not miss the
needy, there has to be funding available that state and local governments
can use to find effective ways to reach those who suffer from extreme
deprivation.

If there was ever a challenge that requires brave and imaginative action,
this has to be it. We need to spend wisely given the enormous likely demand
for fiscal resources in the coming months, but skimping on helping the
truly needy is the surest way to lose the plot.

— (Sen, a Nobel laureate in economics, is professor of economics and
philosophy at Harvard University; Rajan, former RBI Governor, is professor
of finance at University of Chicago’s Booth School; Banerjee, Nobel
laureate in economics, is professor at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology)
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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