Plan panel says all's well

  • 25/09/2008

  • Business Standard (New Delhi)

NREGP SCAN Sreelatha Menon / New Delhi September 25, 2008, 0:26 IST It is now more or less universally acknowledged that there is substantial pilferage from the National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme (NREGP). But there is some good news for the Manmohan Singh government which launched the programme with much fanfare: Numbers collated by the Planning Commission show that it has done better than the earlier job schemes of the Centre. A study done by Planning Commission Economist and Advisor Santosh Mehrotra said that the Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana (SGRY), launched in 2001 by the Atal Bihari Vajpayee-led NDA government, generated only 26 man-days per household in 2005-06 when it covered all districts before being phased out this year. In comparison, the NREGP achieved 43 man-days in 2006-07 covering just 200 districts. However, the number declined to 42 man-days in 2007-08 covering 330 districts. That apart, NREGP outshines all other schemes in sheer size. The total employment generated under NREGP is clearly much larger than the earlier employment schemes, SGRY and the National Food For Work Programme, the study said. While the earlier programmes generated 748 million man-days in 2002-03 and 856 million in 2003-04, under NREGP the figure touched 905 million in 2006-07 (in just 200 districts) and 1,437 million in 2007-08 (330 districts). It has now been extended to all the 500-plus districts of the country. The numbers for the current financial year, consequently, are expected to be still higher. While the present scheme hinges on its guarantee of providing 100 days of paid work on demand to whoever demands it, 10 per cent of all those who demanded got 100 days of work in 2006-07. In the following year, it rose to 11 per cent, the study revealed. However, the Planning Commission has admitted in the study that if the scheme was meant for the poorest of the poor, the most backward and poor states found no use for it