Migration in India —
Types, Causes, Impacts & Challenges
A comprehensive UPSC guide to migration in India — forms, patterns, push-pull factors, Census 2011 and PLFS 2020-21 data, socio-economic consequences, feminisation of agriculture, migrant worker challenges, government welfare measures (ONORC, e-Shram), climate-induced migration, World Migration Report 2026, National Migration Survey 2026-27, India's remittance record (14.3% of global remittances, 2024), PYQs, probable questions, and FAQs.
What is Migration?
Migration is the movement of people away from their usual place of residence — either within a country (internal migration) or across international borders (international migration). For a large, diverse country like India, the study of population movement is essential for understanding the dynamics of society, labour markets, urbanisation, and regional development.
Migration in India is a silent engine of economic growth — driving urban labour supply, rural remittances, female labour force dynamics, and national productivity. Yet migrant workers remain among the most precarious groups in the Indian economy, as the COVID-19 pandemic's reverse migration of approximately 1 crore workers in 2020 dramatically revealed — exposing institutional failures in welfare portability, social security, and crisis support.
India's migration landscape is shaped by deep regional development disparities: Bihar's per capita GSDP was just Rs 66,828 in 2023-24 — barely a quarter of the national average and less than one-sixth of Maharashtra's Rs 3,18,560 — creating powerful structural pressures for inter-state migration from labour-surplus states to industrial hubs.
Types and Patterns of
Migration in India
| Classification Basis | Type | Description & Example |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic scope | Internal Migration | Migration within India — from one state/district to another. 99% of India's total migration is internal (Census 2011). |
| Geographic scope | External / International Migration | Migration from India to another country. Only 1% of total migration. India has 18+ million nationals abroad — the world's largest diaspora. |
| Origin-Destination | Rural-Rural | 21 crore migrants (54% of classifiable internal migration, Census 2011). Mainly driven by marriage, agricultural seasonality, and distress. |
| Origin-Destination | Rural-Urban | Driven by employment pull factors. Major flow from UP/Bihar to Delhi/Mumbai/Bangalore. Feeds urban labour markets and creates slum settlements. |
| Origin-Destination | Urban-Urban | Skilled migration between cities — professionals, IT workers, students. Growing with rise of tier-2 city economies. |
| Origin-Destination | Urban-Rural (Counter-urbanisation) | Growing post-COVID with work-from-home; reverse migration of professionals to hometowns. |
| Administrative | Intra-state Migration | 88% of all internal migration (Census 2011). 70% driven by marriage and family. Most dominant pattern in India. |
| Administrative | Inter-state Migration | 12% of internal migration. UP and Bihar largest source states; Maharashtra and Delhi largest destination states. |
| Voluntariness | Voluntary Migration | Chosen by the individual — better economic opportunities, marriage, education. Most common form. |
| Voluntariness | Forced Migration | Not chosen — due to war, persecution, natural disasters, development projects. Includes environmental/climate displacement. |
| Duration | Temporary / Seasonal Migration | Short-duration, especially for seasonal agricultural work or construction. Circular migration — workers move seasonally and return. |
| Duration | Permanent Migration | Intended to settle permanently. More associated with international emigration (diaspora) and urban settlement. |
| Direction | Reverse Migration | Return to place of origin after previous migration. COVID-19 triggered massive reverse migration of ~1 crore workers in 2020. Also growing as tier-2 cities develop. |
Causes — Push, Pull &
Push-Back Factors
Migration is driven by a combination of factors pushing people out of their origin and pulling them toward destinations. Understanding this framework is essential for answering UPSC questions on migration, urbanisation, and regional development.
Marriage — Dominant Driver of Female Migration
Marriage is the single largest reason for migration among women in India — accounting for 86.8% of female migration (PLFS 2020-21). This reflects the patrilocal marriage system where women relocate to their husband's household, often crossing state or district boundaries. As a result, India's female migration rate (47.9%) is far higher than male (10.7%), yet female migrants' economic contribution is undercounted.
Environmental & Climate Factors
Environmental factors are increasingly driving migration — droughts in Bundelkhand and Marathwada, floods in Bihar and Assam, cyclones in Odisha, and water scarcity across peninsular India. Climate change intensifies these pressures. The global record of 45.8 million disaster-related internal displacements in 2024 (World Migration Report 2026) includes a substantial Indian contribution. Odisha's Satabhaya coastal relocation is an early government-managed climate relocation case.
Development Projects & Displacement
Large-scale development projects — dams (Sardar Sarovar), mines, industrial corridors, highways — displace communities and force migration. India's development-displaced population since independence is estimated at 5-6 crore. Tribal communities are disproportionately affected, as their lands are often the site of natural resources. Inadequate rehabilitation and resettlement (R&R) policies have historically turned this into distress migration.
Census 2011 & PLFS 2020-21
Migration Data for UPSC
These statistics from India's official sources are directly testable in UPSC Prelims and must be cited in Mains answers. The PLFS 2020-21 data (more recent) is especially important as it is post-COVID and reflects updated trends.
| Indicator | Census 2011 | PLFS 2020-21 |
|---|---|---|
| Overall migration rate | 38% of population (45.6 crore) | 28.9% (definition difference — uses Usual Place of Residence) |
| Migration growth | 45% increase since 2001 (vs 18% population growth) | — |
| Internal vs international | 99% internal; 1% international | — |
| Rural-rural migration | 21 crore (54% of classifiable internal) | — |
| Intra-state vs inter-state | 88% intra-state; 12% inter-state | — |
| Largest source states | Uttar Pradesh and Bihar | Bihar, UP, Odisha, Jharkhand |
| Largest destination states | Maharashtra and Delhi | Maharashtra, Delhi, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu |
| Reason for intra-state migration | 70% marriage and family | — |
| Male migration rate | — | 10.7% (predominantly employment-driven, 67%) |
| Female migration rate | — | 47.9% (predominantly marriage-driven, 86.8%) |
| Rural female migration | — | 48% (vs 5.9% rural male) |
| Urban female migration | — | 47.8% (vs 22.5% urban male) |
| Rural migrant share | — | Nearly 1 in 4 rural Indians (26.8%) was a migrant |
| Post-COVID estimate | — | Approximately 60 crore (including circular migration) |
Outcomes of Migration
in India
Migration has complex, multidimensional consequences — economic, demographic, social, and environmental — for both source and destination regions. A Mains answer that captures both positive and negative outcomes scores significantly higher.
Economic Consequences
Positive: Remittances — India secured 14.3% of global remittances in 2024 (highest ever share); international remittances reached USD 905 billion globally in 2024. Labour availability increases destination productivity. Negative: Unregulated urban migration causes overcrowding, slum development, and urban infrastructure strain. Brain drain from source regions reduces local economic dynamism.
Demographic Consequences
Migration redistributes population — reducing source region densities while increasing destination pressures. Age and skill-selective migration leaves behind the elderly, women, and children in source regions. Out-migration of rural men leads to feminisation of agriculture — women taking on farming responsibilities without commensurate land rights, credit, or technology access.
Social Consequences
Positive: Migrants act as agents of social change — diffusing ideas about technology, family planning, girls' education, and health from urban to rural areas. Migration promotes intermixing of diverse cultures and evolution of composite culture. Negative: Sense of dejection, rootlessness, and social exclusion among migrants. Fragmentation of joint families. Children's education disruption. Female migrant vulnerability.
Environmental Consequences
Migration to forest-edge regions drives deforestation and biodiversity loss. Urban migration intensifies water scarcity and solid waste challenges in cities. Climate migration itself creates feedback loops — migrants from drought-affected areas settle in water-stressed urban areas, further stressing resources. Seasonal agricultural migration can lead to overuse of host-region land and water resources.
Regional Development Effects
Remittances from migrants reduce poverty in source states — MPI (Multidimensional Poverty Index) improvement is partly credited to migrant remittances. However, developmental divergence persists — Bihar's per capita GSDP (Rs 66,828) vs Telangana's (Rs 3,93,385) in 2023-24 shows that migration alone cannot equalise regional development. Evidence from India contrasts with the USA and EU, where inter-regional migration narrowed development gaps.
Feminisation of Agriculture
As men migrate for urban employment, women increasingly manage agricultural operations — without corresponding land ownership, credit access, agricultural extension services, or social support. A 2019 Bundelkhand study found that male out-migration adds 4 extra hours of unpaid work per day for wives and raises their risk of harassment. While rural women gain decision-making agency, feminisation without empowerment reinforces gender inequality.
Challenges Faced by
Migrant Workers in India
Migrant workers — especially inter-state workers in construction, manufacturing, and domestic service — face a cluster of interconnected vulnerabilities that make them among the most precarious groups in the Indian economy.
No Social Security or Health Benefits
80-90% of migrant work has no written contracts. Social security benefits (health insurance, provident fund, ESIC) are inaccessible to most informal migrant workers. The Supreme Court in In Re: Problems and Miseries of Migrant Labourers (2020-21) issued multiple directions — but implementation gaps remain. Karnataka and Rajasthan have enacted gig worker protection laws at state level.
No Welfare Portability
Food (PDS/ONORC) is now partially portable (35 states/UTs by 2023), but health insurance, pension, and housing entitlements do not follow migrants. Families who stay behind in source states cannot access the migrant's PDS at the destination — limiting ONORC's impact on inter-state migrants (Tumbe and Jha, 2024). Health and pension portability remain significant gaps.
Lack of Affordable Housing
Migrant workers face severe housing challenges in destination cities — overcrowded dormitories, informal settlements near construction sites, and slums without basic sanitation. The Affordable Rental Housing Complexes (ARHC) scheme addresses this partially, but scale remains insufficient. Housing deprivation is particularly acute for single male migrants who send most income home as remittances.
Electoral Exclusion
Migrants registered in source state electoral rolls cannot conveniently vote in destination states. The Election Commission proposed a Multi-Constituency Remote Electronic Voting Machine (RVM) as a pilot to allow domestic migrants to vote for home constituencies from remote locations — but the plan has not been implemented at scale. This political exclusion makes migrants invisible in policy-making.
Children's Education Disruption
Inter-state migration disrupts children's education — different languages of instruction, school systems, and curriculum create barriers. Children of circular migrants often fall out of school during migration cycles. The Right to Education Act mandates no child should be turned away, but implementation gaps persist for migrant children who lack local documentation.
Female Migrant Vulnerability
Female migrant workers — especially in domestic service — are particularly exposed to exploitation: wage theft, long hours, physical and sexual violence, and no formal employment contracts. They lack union protection, have no minimum wage enforcement, and are isolated in private homes. The Karnataka Platform-Based Gig Workers Bill (2024) and Rajasthan's Gig Workers Act (2023) are state-level steps toward formalisation.
Government Measures for
Migrant Worker Welfare
One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC)
Allows PDS beneficiaries to draw food entitlements from any Fair Price Shop anywhere in India using Aadhaar-linked ration cards — the most significant welfare portability reform for migrants. Covers 35 states and UTs (as of 2023). A June 2025 government note proposed extending the same Aadhaar API architecture to health insurance and pensions — schemes "following" the worker.
e-Shram Portal (August 2021)
National database for unorganised workers with Universal Account Numbers (UAN) linked to Aadhaar. As of 2024, 30+ crore workers registered. Provides linkage to Ayushman Bharat health insurance, PMJJBY life insurance, PMSBY accident insurance, and skill records. Enables portable identity for migrant workers. Limitations: incomplete registrations; weak integration with actual scheme delivery.
Affordable Rental Housing Complexes (ARHC)
Scheme to provide housing at affordable rents to migrants and urban poor near their workplace. Implemented under PM Awas Yojana (Urban). Both government-funded housing and private sector participation models. Addresses one of the most acute challenges of migrant workers — expensive, overcrowded, and insecure urban housing. Scale of implementation remains limited relative to need.
Code on Social Security, 2020
Consolidated 9 labour laws into one code, including provisions for inter-state migrant workers — insurance, provident fund, and gratuity. The Inter-State Migrant Workmen (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Service) Act 1979 was subsumed into this code. Key concern: the Code's rules have not been fully notified in all states — limiting implementation of these protective provisions for migrant workers.
Remote Voting (Proposed)
Election Commission proposed a Multi-Constituency Remote Electronic Voting Machine (RVM) to allow domestic migrants to vote for their home constituencies from remote locations. Pilot announced but not yet implemented at scale. Political parties have raised concerns about technical feasibility and electoral roll management. If implemented, it would be transformational for migrant political inclusion — giving 60 crore+ internal migrants a political voice in destination states.
PM Garib Kalyan Ann Yojana & GKRA
During COVID-19: PMGKAY provided free food grains to 80 crore beneficiaries (extended through 2023, then made permanent for 5 years in January 2024). Garib Kalyan Rojgar Abhiyan (GKRA) provided employment to returnee migrants in 116 selected districts across 6 states (Bihar, UP, MP, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Odisha) — recognising reverse migration as an economic crisis requiring immediate response.
Current Events Linked to
Migration in India — 2024–26
These events are directly testable in UPSC Mains 2026 — linking migration to remittances, climate displacement, data policy, and international migration trends.
The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) announced a year-long National Migration Survey to be conducted July 2026–June 2027 by the National Statistical Office (NSO). This is India's most comprehensive migration survey since the NSS 64th round (2007-08) — nearly two decades ago. A draft questionnaire was released and public feedback invited by November 30, 2025.
Significance: The survey fills a critical data vacuum — especially post-COVID, when reverse migration and labour displacement became major socio-economic concerns. It will produce estimates on: overall migration rate; out-migration levels; short-term and circular migration (which Census snapshots miss); reasons for migration; net migration balance; employment outcomes; income changes; and gender-based migration trends. The data will guide targeted policies for housing, social protection portability, urban planning, and regional development. Current data (PLFS 2020-21): overall migration rate 28.9%; female 47.9%; male 10.7%; nearly 1 in 4 rural Indians (26.8%) was a migrant.
According to World Bank data, India secured 14.3% of global remittances in 2024 — the highest share ever recorded. Global remittances reached approximately USD 905 billion in 2024 (World Migration Report 2026; World Bank). India has been the world's largest recipient of remittances since 2008. The India-UAE corridor is the 5th largest migration corridor globally (driven by Indian workers in construction, retail, services — over 3 million Indians in UAE); the India-USA corridor is the 6th largest (approximately 3.2 million Indian migrants in the US in 2024 — second-largest foreign-born group after Mexicans).
Economic significance: Remittances from the Indian diaspora (18+ million nationals abroad) are a major source of foreign exchange, helping finance India's current account deficit. They directly support rural household consumption, education, and healthcare — particularly in source states (Kerala, UP, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh). Remittances have remained more stable than FDI during global crises. For recipients, remittances are used primarily for essential expenses (food, healthcare, education) and have been a key driver of poverty reduction — partly explaining India's MPI improvement (24.82 crore lifted out of multidimensional poverty, 2013-14 to 2022-23).
The World Migration Report 2026 (published by IOM) reported: 304 million people living outside their country of birth by mid-2024 (3.7% of global population, vs 2.9% in 1990); over 120 million displaced worldwide by end of 2024; disaster-related internal displacements reached a record 45.8 million in 2024; global remittances reached USD 905 billion. Climate change and environmental degradation are increasingly contributing to migration through droughts, floods, storms, wildfires, and rising temperatures.
India-specific: India is among the countries most vulnerable to climate-induced internal displacement — droughts (Bundelkhand, Marathwada), floods (Bihar, Assam), and cyclones (Odisha, Andhra Pradesh) all drive seasonal and permanent migration. NDMA's 2024 guidelines on Community-Based Disaster Risk Reduction and a pilot AI system (fusing IMD Doppler radar, ISRO satellite crop-stress indices, and mobile tower data) to predict drought-triggered migration 3 days in advance demonstrate India's emerging climate-migration governance approach. Odisha's Satabhaya village relocation is India's most prominent government-managed climate relocation case.
The e-Shram portal — launched August 2021 — had registered over 30 crore unorganised workers by 2024, creating India's largest labour database. Workers receive Universal Account Numbers (UAN) linked to Aadhaar, with connections to Ayushman Bharat, PMJJBY, and PMSBY. A June 2025 'Migrant Workers Best Practices' note by the government proposed a unified portable social registry using Aadhaar APIs — where schemes "follow" the worker across states — addressing the fundamental portability gap.
Challenges remaining: Despite 30 crore registrations, incomplete data; weak integration with actual scheme delivery; migrants not knowing their rights; and lack of enforcement mean the portal has not yet delivered on its promise of portable welfare. Only food rations (ONORC, 35 states/UTs) are meaningfully portable; health and pension benefits lag. A 2025 NITI Aayog note recommended expanding ONORC's database architecture to health insurance and pensions — the most promising policy direction for migrant welfare. State-level innovations: Karnataka Gig Workers Bill 2024 and Rajasthan Gig Workers Act 2023 show states leading on labour protection for non-traditional migrant workers.
UPSC Mains PYQs —
Migration in India
These are actual UPSC Mains questions on migration, with approach notes calibrated to current data (PLFS 2020-21, World Migration Report 2026, National Migration Survey 2026-27).
Examine the causes and socio-economic consequences of rural-urban migration in India. How does it affect both source and destination regions? (UPSC Mains 2023)
Approach: Causes — push (poverty, agricultural underemployment, Bihar GSDP Rs 66,828 vs national average Rs 2,11,725); pull (employment, wages, amenities, Maharashtra GSDP Rs 3,18,560). Source effects: remittances (India 14.3% global share, 2024); feminisation of agriculture (women taking on 4 extra hours/day — Bundelkhand study); reverse brain drain of skilled workers limiting local development. Destination effects: urban labour supply; slum formation; infrastructure strain; Dharavi example. Policy: ONORC, e-Shram (30+ crore), ARHC, GKRA. PLFS 2020-21: male migration 10.7% (67% employment-driven), female 47.9% (86.8% marriage).
Discuss the role of remittances in India's development. What challenges do migrant workers face and what policy measures have been taken to address them? (UPSC Mains 2022)
Approach: Remittances' role: India 14.3% of global remittances in 2024 — highest ever; largest recipient since 2008; funds household consumption, education, healthcare; reduces poverty (MPI improved 2013-14 to 2022-23); counter-cyclical stabiliser. India-UAE (5th largest corridor globally), India-USA (6th). Challenges: no written contracts (80-90%); welfare non-portability (health, pension); ONORC partial (35 states, but inter-state impact limited); housing; electoral exclusion. Policy: ONORC, e-Shram (30+ crore), Code on Social Security 2020, ARHC, Remote Voting (proposed), SC directions in In Re: Migrant Labourers (2020-21). June 2025 note on unified portable social registry via Aadhaar APIs.
Analyse the phenomenon of reverse migration that occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic. What are its short-term and long-term implications for source regions? (UPSC Mains 2021)
Approach: COVID reverse migration: approximately 1 crore workers walked home during lockdown March-May 2020; exposed welfare portability failure, absence of labour database, migrant invisibility. Short-term: agricultural labour surplus in source states; pressure on MGNREGS; food security strain; VLR data shows 11.7 million left Bihar in 4.5 years post-pandemic. Long-term: GKRA (116 districts, 6 states); PMGKAY extended; e-Shram portal launched; ONORC expanded; potential for permanent return migration to tier-2 cities as work-from-home grows. National Migration Survey 2026-27 needed to capture post-COVID migration patterns.
What are the challenges faced by migrant workers in India? Discuss the measures taken by the government to address these challenges. (UPSC Mains 2020)
Approach: Challenges: no social security (Code on Social Security 2020 not fully implemented); welfare non-portability; housing (ARHC insufficient); electoral exclusion (RVM proposed); children's education disruption; female migrant vulnerability (gig worker laws emerging in Karnataka 2024, Rajasthan 2023). Government measures: e-Shram (30+ crore by 2024); ONORC (35 states/UTs); ARHC; GKRA; Code on Social Security 2020; PMGKAY (extended 5 years January 2024); SC directions in In Re: Migrant Labourers. Gaps: health/pension portability; enforcement of labour laws; data deficit (National Migration Survey 2026-27 to address).
Discuss the feminisation of agriculture in India. What are its causes and what are the implications for women and food security? (UPSC Mains 2019)
Approach: Feminisation of agriculture — increasing share of women in agricultural labour as male members migrate for urban employment. Causes: PLFS 2020-21 — 67% of male migration is employment-driven; rural male migration rate 5.9% vs female 48%. Impact on women: 4 extra hours unpaid work/day (Bundelkhand study 2019); increased harassment risk; agriculture without land ownership, credit, or technology access — "feminisation without empowerment." Food security implications: women are better stewards of household food security (IFPRI research); but without resources, they farm less productively. Way forward: land rights for women; access to agricultural credit (Kisan Credit Card); extension services; MGNREGS as safety net; self-help groups for rural women farmers.
Analyse the factors leading to inter-state migration in India and its socio-economic consequences for source and destination states. (UPSC Mains 2016)
Approach: Factors: Bihar GSDP disparity (Rs 66,828 vs national Rs 2,11,725 in 2023-24); agricultural underemployment; Jharkhand Migration Survey 2023 (4.5 million inter-state migrants); Odisha Migration Survey 2023 (1.7 million). Source state effects: remittances; feminisation of agriculture; demographic skew (young men away). Destination state effects: labour supply and productivity; housing/infrastructure pressure; sons-of-soil tensions (Haryana 75%, AP 100% local job reservations). Census 2011: UP and Bihar largest sources; Maharashtra and Delhi largest destinations. PLFS 2020-21: 67% of male migration is employment-driven. Policy need: National Migration Survey 2026-27 to update data.
Probable UPSC Mains Questions
on Migration — 2026
Based on current events (National Migration Survey 2026-27, India's record 14.3% remittance share 2024, World Migration Report 2026, e-Shram 30+ crore, climate migration) — these are high-probability questions for UPSC Mains 2026.
MoSPI has announced a National Migration Survey for July 2026–June 2027 — India's first comprehensive migration survey in nearly two decades. Critically examine the data gaps in India's migration governance and why such a survey is essential for evidence-based policymaking.
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Very High Probability
Disaster-related internal displacements reached a record 45.8 million globally in 2024 (World Migration Report 2026). Critically examine the challenge of climate-induced migration in India — its drivers, vulnerable regions, governance gaps, and the policy framework needed to manage it.
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Very High Probability
India secured 14.3% of global remittances in 2024 — the highest share ever. Critically examine the role of remittances in India's development, including their contribution to household welfare, poverty reduction, and foreign exchange — and the challenges of leveraging diaspora capital for productive investment.
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability
Despite the e-Shram portal's 30+ crore registrations and the One Nation One Ration Card covering 35 states, migrant workers in India remain among the most precarious groups in the economy. Critically evaluate the gap between policy intent and implementation in migrant worker welfare.
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability
The out-migration of rural men has led to the feminisation of agriculture in India. Critically examine this phenomenon — its drivers, its implications for women's empowerment and agricultural productivity, and the policy responses needed to support women farmers.
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability
"India's social protection system is designed for sedentary workers and fails migrants." Critically examine this claim with reference to PDS portability (ONORC), health insurance, pension, and housing entitlements, and suggest a unified portable social protection architecture for migrant workers.
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · High Probability
Haryana's 75% private sector job reservation and Andhra Pradesh's 100% local employment policy reflect the 'sons of soil' doctrine that creates hostility against migrant workers. Critically examine how such policies contradict the constitutional guarantee of freedom of movement and their implications for India's labour market.
Expected: 10–15 Marks · Moderate Probability
Bihar's per capita GSDP (Rs 66,828, 2023-24) is barely a quarter of the national average, driving massive inter-state migration. Critically examine whether migration from labour-surplus states to industrial hubs is narrowing or widening India's regional development disparities.
Expected: 10–15 Marks · Moderate Probability
The COVID-19 pandemic triggered the most visible reverse migration in India's modern history — approximately 1 crore workers walking home during the 2020 lockdown. What institutional failures did this reveal and how effectively have they been addressed in the subsequent five years?
Expected: 15 Marks · 250 Words · Moderate Probability
The Election Commission's proposed Remote Voting Machine (RVM) for migrant workers could transform the political inclusion of India's 60+ crore internal migrants. Critically evaluate the proposal — its potential impact, technical challenges, and electoral implications.
Expected: 10 Marks · Moderate Probability
FAQs — Migration in India
for UPSC Preparation
These questions target the most common Google searches by UPSC aspirants on this topic — each answer written for exam depth and Google featured-snippet eligibility.
- Economic (push): poverty, low agricultural income, underemployment (Bihar GSDP Rs 66,828 — a quarter of national average), resource exhaustion
- Economic (pull): better employment, higher wages, IT sector jobs in Bengaluru/Hyderabad, urban amenities
- Socio-cultural: marriage (86.8% of female migration), family reunification, caste discrimination, religious persecution
- Political: political instability, persecution, separatist conflicts, sons-of-soil policies (Haryana 75% job reservation creating migration deterrents)
- Environmental: droughts (Bundelkhand, Marathwada), floods (Bihar, Assam), cyclones (Odisha), climate change, development project displacement (dams, mines)
- No social security: 80-90% of migrant work has no written contracts; social security inaccessible to informal workers
- Welfare non-portability: only food (ONORC) is portable; health, pension, housing entitlements don't follow migrants
- Lack of affordable housing: overcrowded dormitories and informal settlements in cities
- Electoral exclusion: cannot vote in destination states (Remote Voting Machine proposed but not implemented)
- Children's education disruption: interstate migration disrupts schooling
- Female migrant vulnerability: domestic workers especially exposed to exploitation, wage theft, violence
- Sons-of-soil hostility: Haryana 75%, AP 100% local job reservation creating anti-migrant sentiment
- Wage theft and underpayment: especially in construction and manufacturing
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