Content
- A missed opportunity to guarantee minimum wages
- How to secure India’s supply chains
A missed opportunity to guarantee minimum wages
Basics & Static Background
- MGNREGA Design: Provides 100 days of guaranteed unskilled employment per rural household with legal enforceability, unemployment allowance provisions, and transparency tools like social audits and MIS-based tracking systems.
- Wage Evolution: From 2006–09, wages were aligned with State agricultural minimum wages under Section 6(2); post-2009, central notification under Section 6(1) delinked wages from statutory minimum wage regimes.
- VB-G RAM G Shift: Enacted in December 2025, increases guarantee to 125 days but introduces fiscal restructuring (60:40 cost sharing) and retains centralized wage-setting power under Section 10.
- Structural Change: Unlike MGNREGA’s demand-driven model, VB-G RAM G introduces implicit ceilings via budgetary allocation and administrative controls, weakening the legal guarantee of employment on demand.
Relevance
- GS II (Polity & Governance)
- Article 39A, legal aid vs economic justice linkages
- Federalism issues in Centrally Sponsored Schemes
- GS II (Social Justice)
- Wage inequality, rural distress, labour rights
- GS III (Economy)
- Rural wages, consumption demand, labour markets
Practice Questions
Q1.“Decoupling MGNREGA wages from statutory minimum wages has undermined its role as a rural wage floor.”Critically examine. (250 words)
Overview
- Constitutional Conflict: Payment below minimum wages may violate Article 23 (forced labour jurisprudence in PUDR case) and Article 39(d), as inadequate remuneration under a state programme can amount to coercive labour conditions.
- Legal Vulnerability: MGNREGA’s non–obstante clause allowed deviation from Minimum Wages Act, but VB-G RAM G lacks such protection, making sub-minimum wages legally indefensible and open to constitutional challenge.
- Federal Imbalance: Under VB-G RAM G, States bear 40% wage costs but lack wage-setting authority, creating fiscal stress and undermining cooperative federalism principles.
- Wage Floor Collapse: Early MGNREGA strengthened rural wage floors by aligning with minimum wages; post–2009 decoupling reversed this effect, weakening bargaining power of agricultural labourers.
- Economic Signal: Wage suppression reduces labour demand for the scheme, weakens its multiplier effect on rural consumption, and limits its role as a counter-cyclical safety net during economic distress.
- Labour Market Divergence: By 2014, MGNREGA wages were only ~60% (men) and ~75% (women) of market wages; continued stagnation further widened this gap, reducing programme attractiveness.
- Administrative Control: Wage stagnation acts as “silent rationing,” reducing participation without changing statutory provisions, enabling fiscal consolidation without explicit policy rollback.
- Payment Risk Premium: Delays of 15–30+ days effectively reduce real wages compared to market wages paid daily, creating a negative incentive structure for workers.
- Corruption Feedback Loop: Lower participation reduces social audit vigilance, increasing ghost entries, fake muster rolls, and diversion of wages through Aadhaar-linked fraud mechanisms.
- Technological Exclusion: Aadhaar-based Payment System (ABPS) and NMMS introduce transaction failures, biometric mismatches, and digital exclusion, disproportionately affecting elderly and migrant workers.
Data & Evidence
- Wage Rate Trends: As of April 1, 2025, average MGNREGA wage stands at ₹370/day (≈6% annual increase), but several States saw sub-inflation hikes, resulting in real wage decline.
- Interstate Variation: Haryana records highest wage (~₹400/day), while Chhattisgarh remains among lowest (~₹261/day), reflecting uneven wage floors across States.
- Minimum Wage Gap: In most States, MGNREGA wages are ₹50–₹150 below agricultural minimum wages in 2025–26, reversing early parity and weakening legal compliance.
- Inflation Mismatch: In Uttar Pradesh, wage hike of ~3.04% in 2025–26 lagged behind CPI-AL inflation, effectively reducing real wages despite nominal increase.
- Budgetary Signal: Union Budget 2026 allocates ₹95,692 crore for VB-G RAM G and ₹30,000 crore for MGNREGA arrears, far below estimated ₹2.3 lakh crore required for full 125-day guarantee implementation.
- Employment Evidence: PLFS 2025 shows rural unemployment at ~2.4% but stagnant casual labour share, indicating weak employment expansion despite official claims of high persondays generation.
- LibTech Findings: Telangana (2025) recorded ~47.6% decline in persondays; nearly 40% workers faced Aadhaar/ABPS failures in at least one of last five transactions.
Structural Comparison
| Feature | MGNREGA (Old) | VB-G RAM G Act (2026) |
| Days Guaranteed | 100 days | 125 days |
| Wage Funding | 100% Central (unskilled) | 60:40 (Centre:State) |
| Wage Authority | Central (Section 6(1)) | Central (Section 10) |
| Demand Nature | Fully demand-driven | Implicit ceilings via allocation |
| Budget 2026 | ₹30,000 Cr (arrears) | ₹95,692 Cr |
Challenges / Gaps / Criticisms
- Real Wage Compression: CPI-AL indexation without real wage growth leads to declining purchasing power, reducing scheme attractiveness and undermining its wage floor function.
- Normative Allocation Crisis: Budget ceilings under VB-G RAM G restrict actual workdays, converting a legal guarantee into a supply-driven programme dependent on fiscal limits.
- Legal Contradiction: Absence of non-obstante clause makes payment below minimum wages potentially unconstitutional and violative of labour laws.
- Fiscal Offloading: 40% State contribution discourages wage hikes and limits expansion, especially for fiscally constrained States.
- Digital Barriers: ABPS and e-KYC requirements create exclusion errors, delays, and non-payment, weakening trust in digital governance systems.
Way Forward
- Minimum Wage Benchmarking: Mandate wages equal to or above State minimum wages to restore legality, strengthen labour markets, and revive worker participation.
- Real Wage Reform: Introduce productivity-linked or rural wage-indexed revisions instead of CPI-AL-only adjustment to ensure real income growth.
- Budget Realignment: Align allocations with statutory guarantee (125 days), avoiding normative ceilings that dilute demand-driven nature of employment guarantee.
- Payment System Overhaul: Ensure T+15 payments, automatic delay compensation, and hybrid payment systems to reduce Aadhaar-based exclusion risks.
- Federal Rebalancing: Provide States flexibility in wage-setting or increase central share to avoid fiscal disincentives and ensure uniform implementation.
Prelims Pointers
- MGNREGA initially followed State minimum wages under Section 6(2), later replaced by central notification under Section 6(1).
- CPI-AL is used for wage indexation under MGNREGA.
- VB-G RAM G Act (2025) increases guarantee to 125 days and introduces 60:40 cost sharing.
- Aadhaar-based Payment System (ABPS) and NMMS are used for wage disbursement and attendance monitoring.
- Non-obstante clause allows overriding of Minimum Wages Act; present in MGNREGA but absent in VB-G RAM G.
How to secure India’s supply chains
Introduction
- Strategic Exposure: Recent West Asia geopolitical disruptions revealed how India’s deep integration with global supply chains transmits shocks into inflation, trade deficits, and production slowdowns across sectors.
- Core Issue: Excessive dependence on imported energy, food inputs, and industrial intermediates creates systemic vulnerabilities, necessitating a transition from efficiency-driven globalization to resilience-driven economic strategy.
Relevance
- GS III (Economy)
- Supply chain resilience, import dependence, industrial policy
- GS II (International Relations)
- Strategic partnerships, Indo-Pacific, resource diplomacy
Practice Questions
Q1.“India must shift from efficiency-driven globalization to resilience-driven supply chain strategy.”
Discuss in the context of recent geopolitical disruptions. (250 words)
Basics & Static Background
- Supply Chain Logic: Modern manufacturing depends on globally fragmented value chains where disruption in upstream raw materials or intermediates can halt downstream production and reduce industrial output.
- Import Structure: India’s imports constitute ~19% of GDP, dominated by raw materials (34%), intermediates (31%), and capital goods (24%), indicating structural dependence on external ecosystems.
- Policy Context: Initiatives like PLI, Atmanirbhar Bharat, and National Logistics Policy aim to reduce dependence but remain skewed toward final assembly rather than upstream ecosystem development.
Overview
- Energy Dependence: India imports ~85% of crude oil and ~50% of gas; in 2025–26, crude import bill surged despite diversification, reflecting vulnerability to geopolitical shocks.
- Diversification Strategy: India now imports crude from 39 countries (up from 27 in 2022), including Russia (~35% share), reducing concentration risk but not overall import dependence.
- Strategic Buffering: Phase II of Strategic Petroleum Reserves adds 6.5 MMT capacity at Chandikhol and Padur, shifting from “just-in-time” to “just-in-case” energy security strategy.
- Macroeconomic Sensitivity: A $10/barrel crude price rise increases import bill by $13–14 billion, raises inflation by 30–40 bps, and reduces GDP growth by 0.2–0.3 percentage points.
- Renewable Transition: India targets 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030; however, intermittency challenges require storage investments and grid modernization to ensure reliability.
- Food Security Gap: Domestic edible oil production meets only ~44% of demand, leading to an annual import bill of ~₹1.5 lakh crore, exposing inflation and external vulnerability.
- Oil Palm Mission: Under NMEO-OP, oil palm cultivation reached 5.2 lakh hectares (2026) with a target of 10 lakh hectares by 2030 to reduce import dependence structurally.
- Fertilizer Dependence: High reliance on phosphatic and potassic fertilizers exposes agriculture to global shocks; Nano-DAP scaled to 5 crore bottles annually, reducing imports by ~15%.
- API Dependence: India historically imported ~65–70% of APIs from China; PLI 2.0 has localized 35 critical APIs, reducing supply chain vulnerability in pharmaceuticals.
- Semiconductor Ecosystem: India’s first 28nm fab (Tata-PSMC) and ATMP units began pilot production in 2026, reducing import risks for electronics, automotive, and strategic sectors.
- Industrial Structure Gap: Continued dependence on high-end machinery and electronic components from East Asia limits domestic value addition and technological depth.
- Critical Minerals Risk: Lithium, cobalt, and rare earths are globally concentrated; India’s domestic auctions (2025) and overseas acquisitions aim to secure long-term supply.
- Strategic Partnerships: Khanij Bidesh India Ltd (KABIL) acquired lithium assets in Argentina and exploration rights in Australia, enabling diversification of critical mineral supply chains.
- Circular Economy Role: Formal e-waste recycling reached ~35% (2025), enabling recovery of gold, silver, and copper, reducing dependence on primary mineral imports.
- Geopolitical Dimension: Supply chain diversification towards Africa, Latin America, and Indo-Pacific aligns with India’s strategic autonomy and reduces overdependence on specific regions.
- Technological Re-engineering: Adoption of input-efficient processes, alternative materials, and direct conversion technologies can reduce structural import intensity over time.
Data & Evidence
- Energy Exposure: ~85% crude and ~50% gas import dependence; imports diversified to 39 countries with Russia as major supplier (~35%).
- Edible Oil Gap: Domestic output meets ~44% demand; import bill ~₹1.5 lakh crore annually; oil palm area expanded to 5.2 lakh hectares (2026).
- Fertilizer Reform: Nano-DAP scaled to 5 crore bottles, reducing traditional DAP imports by ~15%.
- API Localization: 35 high-dependence APIs localized under PLI 2.0, reducing reliance on China.
- Semiconductor Milestone: First domestic 28nm fab and multiple ATMP units operational (pilot stage, 2026).
- Critical Minerals: Lithium block auctions initiated domestically; KABIL secured overseas assets in Argentina and Australia.
- Recycling Progress: Formal e-waste recycling rate reached ~35%, supporting urban mining and reducing raw material imports.
Strategic Snapshot
| Sector | Import Dependence | Resilience Milestone (2025–26) |
| Energy | 85% crude / 50% gas | 39 import sources; SPR Phase II expansion |
| Electronics | High (chips, displays) | 28nm fab pilot + ATMP units operational |
| Pharma | ~70% APIs (earlier) | 35 APIs localized under PLI |
| Fertilizers | High (P&K) | Nano-DAP scaled; ~15% import reduction |
| Minerals | Near 100% (Li, Co) | KABIL acquisitions; domestic auctions |
Challenges / Gaps / Criticisms
- Structural Dependence: Continued reliance on imports for critical sectors such as semiconductors, rare earths, and energy limits strategic autonomy.
- Assembly Bias: Industrial policies still prioritize final assembly, delaying development of upstream and midstream manufacturing ecosystems.
- Capital Intensity: Building domestic capabilities in semiconductors, mining, and energy storage requires high upfront investment and long gestation periods.
- Global Concentration Risk: Critical supply chains remain dominated by few countries, making diversification complex and geopolitically sensitive.
- Coordination Deficit: Fragmented policymaking across sectors reduces effectiveness of a unified supply chain resilience strategy.
Way Forward
- Deep Industrialization: Shift focus from assembly to full value chain integration, including intermediates, capital goods, and raw material processing ecosystems.
- Strategic Diversification: Expand partnerships in Africa, Latin America, and Central Asia for energy, minerals, and agricultural inputs to reduce geographic concentration risks.
- Energy Transition: Accelerate renewable energy, green hydrogen, and storage technologies while expanding domestic exploration and strategic reserves.
- Agricultural Reforms: Scale oilseed missions, improve productivity, and expand bio-fertilizer adoption to reduce import dependence sustainably.
- Technological Capability: Invest in R&D, semiconductor ecosystems, and advanced manufacturing technologies to enhance domestic competitiveness.
- Circular Economy: Promote recycling, urban mining, and resource efficiency to reduce primary import requirements and ensure sustainable supply chains.


