Economic
Survey 2022-23
·
Pessimistic on Growth, Exports
·
Assets Created under Mgnregs Positively Impacting Agricultural Productivity and
Household Income; Reducing Migration and Indebtedness
·
Significant Rise in Rural Female
Labour Force Participation Rate From 19.7 Percent (2018-19) to 27.7 Percent
(2020-21)
The Economic Survey 2022-23 was tabled
by the Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs
Smt Nirmala Sitharaman in Parliament on 31 January,
2023.
The Survey notes that 65 per cent (2021
data) of the country’s population lives in the rural areas and 47 per cent of the
population is dependent on agriculture for livelihood. Thus, the focus of the government
on rural development is imperative. The Government’s emphasis has been on improving
the quality of life in rural areas to ensure more equitable and inclusive development.
The aim of engagement of the government in the rural economy has been “transforming
lives and livelihoods through proactive socio-economic inclusion, integration, and
empowerment of rural India.”
The Survey refers to the National Family
Health Survey data for 2019-21 which illustrates a significant improvement vis-à-vis
2015-16 in an array of indicators concerning the quality of rural lives, including,
inter alia, access to electricity, presence of improved drinking water sources,
coverage under health insurance schemes, etc. Women empowerment has also gained
momentum, with visible progress in female participation in household decision-making,
owning bank accounts, and use of mobile phones. Most of the indicators concerning
the health of rural women and children have improved. These outcome-oriented statistics
establish tangible medium-run progress in rural living standards, aided by the policy
focus on basic amenities and efficient programme implementation.

Source: Economic Survey 2022-23
The Survey notes a multi-pronged approach
to raise the rural incomes and quality of life through different schemes.
1. Livelihood, Skill Development
·
The
Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana-National Rural Livelihood Mission
(DAY-NRLM),
aims to enable economically weak households to access gainful self-employment and
skilled wage employment opportunities resulting in sustainable and diversified livelihood
options for them. This is one of the world’s largest initiatives to improve the
livelihoods of the poor. The cornerstone of the Mission is its ‘community-driven’
approach which has provided a huge platform in the form of community institutions
for women empowerment.
Rural women are at the core of the program
which is extensively focused on their socio-economic empowerment. Nearly 4 lakh
Self Help Group (SHG) members have been trained as Community Resource Persons (CRPs)
(viz. Pashu Sakhi, Krishi Sakhi, Bank Sakhi, Bima Sakhi, Poshan
Sakhi etc.) help in the implementation of the Mission
at the ground level. The Mission has mobilised a total of 8.7 crore women from poor
and vulnerable communities into 81 lakh SHGs.
·
Under
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) a total of 5.6 crore households availed
employment and a total of 225.8 crore person-days employment has been generated
under the Scheme (until 6 January 2023). The number of works done under MGNREGS
has steadily increased over the years, with 85 lakh completed
works in FY22 and 70.6 lakh completed works so far in FY23 (as on 9 January 2023).
These works include creating household assets such as animal sheds, farm ponds,
dug wells, horticulture plantations, vermicomposting pits etc., in which the beneficiary
gets both labour and material costs as per standard rates. Empirically, within a
short span of 2-3 years, these assets have been observed to have a significant positive
impact on agricultural productivity, production-related expenditure, and income
per household, along with a negative association with migration and fall in indebtedness,
especially from non-institutional sources. This, the Survey notes has long-term
implications for aiding income diversification and infusing resilience into rural
livelihoods. Meanwhile, the Economic Survey also observes a Year-on-Year (YoY) decline
in monthly demand for Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme
(MGNREGS) work and this the Survey notes is emanating from normalisation of the
rural economy due to strong agricultural growth and a swift bounce-back from Covid-19.
·
Skill
development has also been one of focus areas for the Government. Under the Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Grameen
Kaushalya Yojana (DDU-GKY), until 30 November 2022,
a total of 13,06,851 candidates have been trained of which 7,89,685 have got job
placements.
2. Women Empowerment
·
The
transformative potential of Self Help Groups (SHGs), exemplified
through their key role in the on-ground response to Covid-19, has served as the
fulcrum of rural development through women empowerment. India has around 1.2 crore
SHGs, 88 per cent being all-women SHGs. The SHG Bank Linkage Project (SHG-BLP),
launched in 1992, has blossomed into the world’s largest microfinance project. The
SHG-BLP covers 14.2 crore families through 119 lakh SHGs with savings deposits of
Rs. 47,240.5 crore and 67 lakh groups with collateral-free loans outstanding of
Rs. 1,51,051.3 crore, as on 31 March 2022. The number of SHGs credit linked has
grown at a CAGR of 10.8 per cent during the last ten years (FY13 to FY22). Notably,
SHGs’ bank repayment is more than 96 per cent, underscoring their credit discipline
and reliability.
Women’s economic SHGs have a positive,
statistically significant effect on women’s economic, social, and political empowerment,
with positive effects on empowerment achieved through various pathways such as familiarity
with handling money, financial decision-making, improved social networks, asset
ownership and livelihood diversification.
According to a recent assessment of DAY-National
Rural Livelihood Mission, both participants and functionaries perceived high impacts
of the programme in areas related to women empowerment, self-esteem enhancement,
personality development, reduced social evils; and additionally, medium impacts
in terms of better education, higher participation in village institutions and better
access to government schemes.
During Covid, SHGs were in action mobilising
women to unite, transcend their group identity and collectively contribute to crisis
management. They emerged as pivotal players in crisis management, leading from the
front in - producing masks, sanitisers, and protective gear, creating awareness
about the pandemic, delivering essential goods, running community kitchens, supporting
farm livelihoods etc. The production of masks by SHGs has been a noteworthy contribution,
enabling access to and use of masks by communities in remote rural areas and providing
vital protection against the Covid-19 virus. As on 4 January 2023, more than 16.9
crore masks were produced by SHGs under DAY-NRLM.
·
Rural
women are increasingly participating in economic activity. The survey notes the
noticeable rise in Rural Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) from 19.7
per cent in 2018-19 to 27.7 per cent in 2020-21. The survey calls this upturn in
the FLFPR as a positive development on the gender aspect of employment, which could
be attributable to rising rural amenities freeing up women’s time, and high agricultural
growth over the years. Meanwhile the survey also observes that India’s female LFPR
is likely to be underestimated, with reforms in survey design and content required
to capture the reality of working females more accurately.
3. Housing For All
The Government rolled out “Housing for
All by 2022” to provide shelter with dignity for each and every one. With this target,
the Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana –Gramin (PMAY-G) was launched in November 2016 with the aim
of providing around 3 crore pucca houses with basic amenities to all eligible houseless
households living in kutcha and dilapidated houses in rural areas by 2024. Under
the scheme, landless beneficiaries are accorded the highest priority in the allotment
of houses. A total of 2.7 crore houses have been sanctioned and 2.1 crore houses
have been completed by 6 January 2023 under the Scheme. Against the total target
of completion of 52.8 lakh houses in FY23, 32.4 lakh houses have been completed.
4. Water and Sanitation
·
On
the 73rd Independence Day, 15 August 2019, the Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) was
announced, to be implemented in partnership with States, to provide by 2024, tap
water connection to every rural household and public institutions in villages like
schools, Anganwadi centres, ashram shalas (tribal residential
schools), health centres etc. At the time of the rollout of the JJM in August 2019,
about 3.2 crore (17 per cent) households out of the total of 18.9 crore rural households
had a tap water supply. Since the launch of the Mission, as of 18 January 2023,
of 19.4 crore rural households, 11.0 crore households are getting tap water supply
in their homes.
·
Mission
Amrit Sarovar
aimed at developing and rejuvenating of 75 water bodies in each district of the
country during the Amrit Varsh - 75th year
of independence. The mission was launched by the Government on National Panchayati
Raj Day in 2022. Against an initial target of 50,000 Amrit Sarovars,
a total of 93,291 Amrit Sarovar sites were identified, works commenced on more than
54,047 sites and out of these sites were works began, a total of 24,071 Amrit Sarovars have been constructed. The mission helped develop 32
crore cubic meters of water holding capacity and created a total carbon sequestration
potential of 1.04,818 tonnes of carbon per year. The mission transformed into a
mass movement with Shram Dhaan
from the community, where Freedom Fighters, Padma Awardees and elder citizens of
the area also participated along with the establishment of Water User Groups. This
coupled with the launch of Jaldoot App that helps the
Government document and monitor ground water resources and local water level would
make water scarcity a thing of the past.
·
Phase
II of the Swachh Bharat Mission (G) is under implementation from FY21 to
FY25. It aims to transform all villages into ODF Plus with focus to sustain ODF
status of villages and covering all the villages with Solid and Liquid Waste management
systems. India achieved ODF status in all villages in the country on 2nd
October 2019. Now, about 1,24,099 villages have been declared as ODF Plus till November
2022 under the mission. Andaman & Nicobar Islands have been declared as the
first ‘Swachh, Sujal Pradesh’ with all its villages being
declared as ODF plus.
5. Smoke Free Rural Homes
The release of 9.5 crore LPG connections
under the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana, has helped in
increasing the LPG coverage from 62 per cent (on 1 May 2016) to 99.8 per cent (on
1 April 2021). The Union Budget for FY22, made a provision for the release of an
additional one crore LPG connections under the PMUY scheme, i.e., Ujjwala 2.0 - this scheme will offer deposit-free LPG connection,
first refill and hot plate free of cost to beneficiaries, and a simplified enrolment
procedure. In this phase, a special facility has been given to migrant families.
Under this Ujjwala 2.0 scheme, 1.6 crore connections have
been released until 24 November 2022.
6. Rural Infrastructure
·
Since
its inception, the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana
helped create 1,73,775 number of roads measuring 7,23,893 km and 7,789 Long Span
Bridges(LSBs) against the sanctioned, 1,84,984 roads measuring
8,01,838 km and 10,383 Long Span Bridges (LSBs) under all its verticals/interventions
points the survey. The survey observes that various independent impact evaluation
studies were carried out on PMGSY, which have concluded that the scheme has had
a positive impact on agriculture, health, education, urbanization, employment generation
etc.
·
SAUBHAGYA- Pradhan Mantri Sahaj Bijli Har Ghar Yojana, was launched to achieve universal household electrification
by providing electricity connections to all willing un-electrified households in
rural areas and all willing poor households in urban areas in the country. The connections
were given for free to economically poor households and for others, Rs 500 was charged
after the release of the connection in 10 instalments. The Saubhagya
scheme has been successfully completed and closed on 31st March 2022.
Deendayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana (DDUGJY), envisaged the creation of
basic electricity infrastructure in villages/habitations, strengthening & augmentation
of existing infrastructure, and metering of existing feeders/distribution transformers/
consumers to improve the quality and reliability of power supply in rural areas.
A total of 2.9 crore households have been electrified since the launch of the Saubhagya period in October 2017 under various schemes viz (Saubhgaya, DDUGJY, etc.).
