Published on: December 16, 2025
VIKSIT BHARAT — GUARANTEE FOR ROZGAR AND AJEEVIKA MISSION (GRAMIN) BILL
VIKSIT BHARAT — GUARANTEE FOR ROZGAR AND AJEEVIKA MISSION (GRAMIN) BILL
NEWS
- The Union government plans to introduce the Viksit Bharat — Guarantee For Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill (VB-G RAM G Bill) in Parliament.
- The Bill seeks to replace the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), 2005, signalling a major shift in India’s rural employment framework.
HIGHLIGHTS
Key Features of the Proposed Bill
- Guaranteed workdays increased from 100 to 125 days per rural household.
- Employment to be provided only in rural areas notified by the Centre.
- Introduced as part of the government’s vision of “Viksit Bharat @2047”.
- Programme may be paused during peak agricultural seasons to ensure labour availability for farming.
Shift from Demand-Driven to Supply-Driven Model
- MGNREGA:
- Demand-based, legal entitlement to work.
- Budget could be expanded based on rural demand.
- VB-G RAM G Bill:
- Fixed annual allocations determined by the Union government.
- States cannot demand additional funds beyond the prescribed limit.
- Marks a shift away from the rights-based employment guarantee.
Changed Funding Pattern
- Earlier system (MGNREGA):
- Centre paid 100% labour wages and 75% material costs (effective 90:10).
- New Bill proposes:
- 60:40 Centre–State cost sharing for most States.
- 90:10 sharing for northeastern, Himalayan States and select UTs.
- Implication: Increased financial burden on States, especially fiscally weaker ones.
Enhanced Central Control
- Centre to decide:
- State-wise allocations using “objective parameters” (yet to be defined).
- Geographical coverage within States.
- Reduces flexibility and decentralised planning earlier available to States and Panchayats.
Technology and Governance Changes
- Codifies existing practices such as:
- Aadhaar-based payments
- Mobile app attendance
- Geotagging of worksites
Concerns and Criticism
- Civil society groups like MKSS argue the Bill dilutes the rights-based nature of MGNREGA.
- Critics see it as a move from employment guarantee to budget-controlled welfare, raising questions on rural livelihood security.
