- Open Access
- Total Downloads : 957
- Authors : Rimki Patgiri
- Paper ID : IJERTV1IS9455
- Volume & Issue : Volume 01, Issue 09 (November 2012)
- Published (First Online): 29-11-2012
- ISSN (Online) : 2278-0181
- Publisher Name : IJERT
- License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Women Empowerment: Establishment Of Micro-Credit Groups And Guaranteed Employment As A Mean To Empower Women
Rimki Patgiri 1
1Dept. Of Political Science, North-Eastern Hill University, Shillong, Meghalaya.
ABSTRACT
Empowerment means not just participation, but also having decision making role in the process of development. The word women empowerment essentially means that the women have the power or capacity to regulate their lives in the social, political and economic terms. The government of India has provided various work opportunities to empowering women through the anti-poverty programme and micro-credit groups. There is a debate on women empowerment through employment in export production. The purpose of the paper is twofold: one is to study the issue of women empowerment and second is to explore whether micro-credit groups and poverty alleviation programme (MGNREGA) is helpful for women empowerment.
Key Words: Empowerment, Women Empowerment, Development, Micro-Credit Groups
-
INTRODUCTION
Empowerment is a multi dimensional social process that helps people gain control over their own lives. There is one policy for women namely National Policy for the Empowering of women 2001. The objectives of the national policy for women empowerment includes equal access to participation and decision making of women in social, economic and political life of the nation.
International organization like World Bank and United Nations also focused on women empowerment issue, especially for rural poor women. There are numerous issues related to women empowerment, for example women often work harder than man but women are still invisible in the process of development, gender discrimination, less payment, cheap labour etc. UNDP coordinates global and national efforts to integrate womens empowerment into poverty reduction, democratic governance, crisis prevention and recovery, and environment and sustainable development. Economic empowerment is vital to sustainable development. Women empowerment could be in the areas of social, economic and political. Therefore, the process of empowerment is influenced by socio-economic and political factors.
Women are not homogeneous group. They have different role and occupation, family business, employment and communities activities. They have different experience. Rural women all over the world are an integral and vital force of development discourse and that is the key to socio- economic progress. Rural women are involved in as a farmer, wage labour, domestic servant, industrial home worker, and micro-producers.
-
Methodology
The study is based on primary and secondary data sources. A short term field visit was conducted in Satara District which is located in the western Indian state of Maharashtra. Primary data was collected from various field study reports, reports of the Ministry of Rural Development, Planning Commission, State government reports through Directorate of Economics and Statistics, Directorate of Rural Development and Panchayat Raj (Assam), Annual reports etc. secondary data was collected from the existing literature like books, articles, journals and news papers relevant to this study.
-
Poverty Alleviation Programmes and Micro-Credits Group
After independence the government of India has adopted number of anti-poverty measures to alleviate poverty. Several scheme like Antyodaya, Integrated Rural Development Programme (IRDP), Training of Rural Youth for Self Employment (TRYSEM), Rural Landless Employment Guarantee Programme (RLEGP), National Rural Employment Programme (NREP), Small Farmer Development Agency (SFDA), Marginal Farmers and Agricultural Labourers (MFAL), Swarna Jayanti Grameen Swarojgari Yojana (SJGSY), Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY), Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana (SGRY), National Food for Work Programme (NFFWP), Rashtriya Mahila Kosh (RMK), Indira Mahila Yojana (IMY), Balika Samridhi Yojana (BSY), Womens Component Plan (WCP), Rural Womens Development and Empowerment (RWDE), Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) etc. have been introduced. Wage employment programmes, an
important component of the anti-poverty strategy, have sought to achieve multiple objectives. They not only provide employment opportunities during lean agricultural seasons but also in times of floods, droughts and other natural calamities.
-
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) is a demand based programme and demand emanating from the village through the Gram Sabha (Sharma, 2010). It is a powerful instrument for inclusive growth in rural India through its impact on social protection, livelihood security and democratic empowerment and also provides a legal guarantee for 100 days of employment in every financial year to an adult member of any rural household willing to do unskilled manual work at the statutory minimum wage. MGNREGA was enacted on 7 September
S.
No.
States
FY 2006
-07
FY 2007
-08
FY 200
8-09
FY 2009-
10
Revised
Wage Rate
1.
Andaman &
Nicobar
130-
139
130-
139
170-181
2.
Andhra
Pradesh
80
80
80
100
121
3.
Arunachal
Pradesh
55-
57
65-
67
65-
67
80
118
4.
Assam
66
76.3
5
79.6
100
130
5.
Bihar
68
77
89
100
120
6.
Chandigarh
140
140
174
7.
Chhattisgarh
62.6
3
62.6
3
75
100
122
8.
Dadar & Nagar Haveli
108.
2
108.2
138
9.
Daman &
Diu
102
102
126
10.
Goa
110
110
138
11.
Gujarat
50
50
100
100
124
12.
Haryana
99.2
1
135
141.
02
141.0
2
179
13.
Himachal Pradesh
75
75
100
100-
125
120-150
14.
Jammu &
Kashmir
70
70
70
100
121
15.
Jharkhand
76.6
8
76.6
8
92
99
120
16.
Karnataka
/td>
69
74
82
100
125
17.
Kerala
125
125
125
125
150
18.
Lakshadwee
p
115
115
138
19.
Madhya
Pradesh
63
85
91
100
122
20.
Maharashtra
47
66-
72
66-
72
100
127
21.
Manipur
72.4
81.4
81.4
81.4
126
22.
Meghalaya
70
70
70
100
117
23.
Mizoram
91
91
110
110
129
24.
Nagaland
66
100
100
100
118
25.
Orissa
55
70
70
90
125
26
Pondicherry
80
100
119
27.
Punjab
93-
105
93-
106
93-
105
100
124-130
28.
Rajasthan
73
73
100
100
119
29.
Sikkim
85
85
100
100
118
30.
Tamil Nadu
80
80
80
100
119
31.
Tripura
60
60
85
100
118
32.
Uttar Pradesh
58
58
100
100
120
33.
Uttaranchal
73
73
100
100
120
34.
West Bengal
69.4
3
69.4
3
75
100
130
nd
were considerable wage disparities among men and women in all other programmes.
Table 1. Wage Rate under MGNREGA:
2005 and came into effect from 2 February 2006
(Sharma, 2010). During the first year of implementation (FY 2006-07) in 200 districts, 2.10 crore households were employed and 90.5 crore persondays were generated. In 2007-08, 3.39 crore households were provided employment and 143.59 crore persondays were generated in 330 districts. In 2008-09, 4.51 crore households have been provided employment and 216.32 crore persondays have been generated across the country. In current financial year, 2011-12, 3.77 crore households were provided employment and 120.88 crore persondays of employment were generated.
The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) has provided income-earning opportunities to women where hardly any existed before. The MGNREGA in India is example of important safety nets for women, allowing childcare facilities to be provided on worksites and requiring provision of work close to participants homes. MGNREGA is also seen to be designed to allow women equity in both access to work and in the payment of wages. The Act mandates that at least one-third of the workers should be women. MGNREGA is seen to be a policy response of the Government of India to a situation of poverty and inequality. Almost 50 percent of the Drought Prone Areas Programme districts were included indicating that the perception of MGNREGA was clearly oriented towards rain-fed areas as the geography of poverty, and the socio-economically weak groups as the sociology of poverty (Khera and Nayak, 2009).
Equal wages between men and women have also been a major incentive for women. The NSSO survey (round 64th) finds that there were no wage discriminations among women and men under Mahatma Gandhi NREGA, whereas, there
Sources: nrega.nic.in
An innovative feature of the MGNREGA is that it gives a central role to Social Audit as a means of continuous public vigilance. It is an effective means for ensuring transparency and accountability under MGNREGA (Shah, 2012). It is indicates that the programme can have a positive impact on social and economic well being of rural people. There is much that the MGNREGA promises from the perspective of womens empowerment as well. The MGNREGAs potential in empowering women by providing them work opportunities has been commented upon by other research as well (Drèze and Oldiges, 2007 and Drèze and Oldiges, 2009). Participation rate of women in the financial year 2009-2010 and 2010-11 at the national level was 48 percent (Sharma, 2010).
Table. 2 Women Participation under MGNREGA in the Financial Year 2011-12
S.
No
States
% of Women
Participation
1.
Kerala
93
2.
Pondicherry
79
3.
Tamil Nadu
76
4.
Goa
76
5.
Rajasthan
69
6.
Himachal
Pradesh
59
7.
Andhra
Pradesh
58
8.
Maharashtra
47
9.
Sikim
47
10.
Andaman
And Nicobar
47
11.
Chhattisgarh
46
12.
Gujarat
46
13.
Karnataka
46
14.
Punjab
44
15.
Madhya
Pradesh
42
16.
Meghalaya
42
17.
Uttarakhand
42
18.
Lakshadweep
42
19.
Odisha
39
20.
Tripura
38
22.
Haryana
36
23.
Manipur
34
24.
West Bengal
32
25.
Jharkhand
32
26.
Bihar
28
27.
Arunachal
Pradesh
25
28.
Assam
25
29.
Mizoram
24
30.
Uttar Pradesh
17
31.
Jammu and
Kashmir
15
Source: nrega.nic.in
3.2 Micro Credit Groups
Micro-credit is a part of microfinance, which provides people to engage in self-employment projects that allow them to generate income. Micro- credit schemes in the early years were organized through group collatera. The whole basis of Mohammad Yuniss model for the Grameen Bank was that social collateral in the form of group underwriting of loans should replace individual collateral banking for the poor. Micro-credit is not only for saving, but also for self employment. Government of India has announced its policy to expand microcredit activities throughout the country. In India, a number of self-help savings and credit groups and microcredit programs have been initiated since 1980s to provide credit facilities to the poor, especially women, in both urban and rural areas. The phenomenon of self help group is an important one in the decades after 1990. National financial institutions like the Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI), the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) and the Rashtriya Mahila Kosh (RMK) have played a significant role in promoting micro- credit (ILO, 2012).This is a key instrument for empowerment, especially for women. In this aspect a case study of MANN DESHI MAHILA GROUPS is presented here:
Maan Deshi Mahila Group is located in the Satara district of Maharashtra. It is one of the largest women self help group that works for women empowerment by providing financial and business management training. They have operating through Maan Deshi Mahila Sahakari Bank, Mandeshi Foundation and Maan Deshi Mahila Bachat Gat Federation. Maan Deshi Mahila Sahkari Bank is Indias first rural financial institution to receive a co-operative licence from the Reserve Bank of India. This bank is a regulated co-operative bank run by and for women. The Bank provide loan to the rural women according to their needs like business investment, education expenses, marriage, sickness, festivals etc. The Maan Deshi Foundation is an NGO that provides a variety of non-financial service to client like financial and business management training, community radio for awareness programme as well as women health and farming workshop, communication skill training, computer training etc. Maan Deshi Mahila Bachat Gat Federation (Self-Help Group Federation) is a non-profit association aimed at helping rural women entrepreneurs. The federation currently consists of more than 2,462 SHGs. These groups are made up of self-employed women such as vegetable vendors, milk sellers, and weavers. They receives loans directly from the Bank and, with additional support from the Indian government, conducts lending activities.
As a self help group its provides women to earn their livelihood, women get space in market, involved in income generation and contribute in family income etc. It has widened the choice set for women by giving them independent income-earning opportunity.
-
-
CONCLUSION
Further, it seems the programme (MGNREGA) does recognize the link between equality and economic development, but limited attention on the issues of gender discrimination and gender distribution of productive assets. The work participation of women under MGNREGA has visible, it gives opportunity to women for governmental work, which is to provide higher wage than market and dignity. Women may be visible in public and private sector, but her visibility does not give her power.
Women are get opportunity to come out from home through micro-credit groups and wage employment programme. In a positive sense we can say that now a days women get space in market, interact
with other people, collect knowledge and contribute in family income etc through the wage employment programmes and micro-credit groups, because before that women contribution like different food products, cloth etc. had only limited at home. Further, women are still lagging behind in terms of educational opportunities, inheritance or property right and economic opportunities. Under patriarchy and social norms women are seen to be inferior to men in public and private sphere. Womens work especially domestic works are often unrecognized and undervalued. Therefore, women are not seen as decision makers in all spheres social, economic, political etc.
REFERENCES
-
Alam, Barkat, Poverty Alleviation, Welfare, Economic Development and NGOs- Some observations, Indian Journal of Public Administration, Vol.45, No. 1, pp. 34-50, January-March, 1999.
-
Amita Sharma, Right Based Legal Guarantee as Development Policy: The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, UNDP, Published by UNDP India, 2010.
-
Bhalla, Sheila, Trends in Poverty, Wages and Employment in India, Indian Journal of Labour Economics, Vol. 40, No. 2, pp. 215- 222, April-June, 1997.
-
B. Bhatia, and J. Dreze, Employment Guarantee in Jharkhand: Ground Realities, Economic and Political Weekly, pp. 3198- 3202, July 22, 2006.
-
Government of India, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, India 2011, New Delhi: Publication Division, p.799, 2011.
-
Government of India, Ministry of Human Resource Development, National Policy for the Empowerment of Women, Department of Women and Child Development, 2001. [7]Jean, Drèze, and Christian Oldiges, Commendable Act, Frontline, Volume 24, No.14, July, 2007.
-
Jean, Drèze, and Christian Oldiges, Work in Progress, Frontline, Volume 26, No. 4, February 14-22, 2009.
-
International Labour Organization (ILO), Decent Work and Womens Economic Empowerment: Good Policy and Practice, United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, Geneva, 2012.
-
Keshav Dev. Gaur, Poverty Alleviation and Rural Diversification, New Delhi: Sunrise Publication, pp.160-161, 2007.
-
Mihir Shah, Report of the Committee for Revision of MGNREGA Operational Guideline, New Delhi: Ministry of Rural Government of India, p.145, 2012.
-
P. Chakraborty, Implementation of Employment Guarantee: A Preliminary Appraisal, Economic and Political Weekly, pp. 548-551, February 17, 2007.
-
Pearson, Ruth, Reassessing Paid Work and Womens Empowerment: Lessons from the Global Economy, London: Zed Book Ltd, 2007.
-
Raghujvansha Prasad Singh, Two Years NREGA, Yojana, Vol.52, p. 8, August, 2008.
-
Reetika Khera and Nandini Nayak, Women Workers and Perceptions of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act in India, Paper Presented at the FAO-IFAD-ILO Workshop on Gaps, Trends and Current Research in Gender Dimensions of Agricultural and Rural Employment:
Differentiated Pathways out of Poverty, Rome, p. 2, 2009.
-
K.R. Venugopal, The Reluctant Guarantee, Social Change, Vol. 37, No. 1, pp.1-6, March, 2007.
-
Heather Campbll, Gender Empowerment in Micro Finance: How SHGs in India Exemplify the Institutional Potential, Spring, Vol. 3, No 1, pp. 6-13, 2012.
-
S.Greason, Female Political Participation and Health in India, Annals of the American
Academy of Political and Social Science, pp. 105-126, 2001.
-
S. Dyahadroy and A. Tambe (ed.), Social Empowerment of Women, Pune: Published by Krantijyoti Savitribai Phule Women Studies Center, 2009.
-
Krishnaraj Maithreyi (ed.), Gender, Food Security and Rural Livelihoods. Kolkata: Stree Publication, pp. 327-334, 2007.