Title: Presentation on Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana (SGSY)/
1Presentation on Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar
Yojana (SGSY)/ National Rural Livelihoods Mission
(N.R.L.M)
2Structure of Presentation
-
- SGSY status
- Re-structuring S.G.S.Y into N.R.L.M
- NRLM Salient Features
- NRLM roll out status
- Issues
3S.G.S.Y - Main Features
- S.G.S.Y - 1999 covering all aspects of
self-employment - Organising Rural BPL into S.H.Gs, provision of
credit linked with subsidy for income generating
assets - Identification of key activities
- Support provided for marketing and infrastructure
creation ( upto 20 of the SGSY allocation ) - Skill Development and Capacity Building Training
of SHGs leading to micro enterprise.
4S.G.S.Y - Status
- Main Achievements since inception
- 20 lakh BPL S.H.Gs covering 250 lakh Swarozgaris
- 152 lakh Swarozgaris assisted with bank credit
subsidy - Credit mobilization Rs.1100 crore in 1999-00 to
over Rs.4450 crore in 2009-10 - Per capita investment Rs.17000 per beneficiary
in 1999 to Rs. 31800 in 2009 - Skills and placement special projects About 2.31
lakh beneficiaries have been trained 1.75lakh
placed
5SGSY- Progress 2009-10 and 2010-11
09-10 10-11
No. of SHGs formed (lakh) 3.89 3.11
Economically Assisted SHGs (lakh) 2.92 3.12
Total Swarozgaris Assisted (lakh) 20.85 21.09
Number of SC/ST Swarozgaris (lakh) 10.76 (52) 10.97 (52)
Number of Women Swarozgaris (lakh) 15.02(72) 14.24 (67)
Number of Minorities Swarozgaris (lakh) 2.41(12) 2.44(12)
Total Central Release (age against central allocation) (crore) Rs.2230 (96) Rs.2665(89)
Total Investment (credit subsidy) (crore Rs.6409 Rs.6400
Total Subsidy Disbursed (crore) Rs.1962 Rs.1814
Total Credit Disbursed ( against target) (crore) Rs.4447(100) Rs. 4586 (88)
Per Capital Income (in Rupees) 31817 31375
6S. No. S.G.S.Y / N.R.L.M BUDGET FOR 2011/12 ( Rs.2914 crs) Total (Rs. in cr.)
1. SGSY/NRLM - Grant in aid to States (support for formation of SHGs, RF, Trg. and CB, subsidy, Mktg. and infrastructure) 2191
2. Special Projects 450
3. M.K.S.P 200
4. RSETI s 50
7Restructuring S.G.S.Y
- Shortcomings experienced during implementation
- Large scale initiatives of some states A.P,
Kerala, and experiences of N.G.Os - Steering Committee constituted by the Planning
Commission for the 11th Plan - 2007 - Recommendations of Prof. Radhakrishna Committee -
2008
8Key lessons from large scale Experiences
- Even the poorest family can come out of abject
poverty , in 6 - 8 years provided - They are organized, build and nurture own
institutions, and, provided continuous
handholding support - able to access thrift and credit in repeat
doses, for meeting varied priority requirements.
External finance of Rs. 1.0 lakh per family
required
8
9NRLM
-
- Goal
- Poverty elimination through social mobilization,
institution building, financial inclusion and a
portfolio of sustainable livelihoods. -
- VISION
- Each poor family should have an annual income of
at least Rs.50,000 per annum - ( current poverty line is equivalent to
Rs.23,000 per family per annum)
9
10NRLM
- Task to reach out to 7.0 crores rural poor
households, and, stay engaged with them till
they come out of poverty - Mission To do this in a time bound manner
11N.R.L.M - SOCIAL MOBILISATION
- Organising the poor to ensure a woman from each
poor family is part of a S.H.G - Inclusion of the poorest, and meaningful role to
them in all processes - Institutions of poor, greatest source of strength
for the poor - Dedicated, professional, sensitive and
accountable support structure to initiate the
process
11
12N.R.L.M SOCIAL MOBILISATION
- Poor to drive all project initiatives key role
of social capital S.H.G and federation leaders,
community professionals - Scaling up through community best practitioners
- Exit policy for external support structures
- Transparency and accountability
- Community self reliance and self dependence
12
13N.R.L.M SOCIAL MOBILISATION
- Piloting by national unit Triggering this work
in 40 districts and 100 Blocks - Proof of concept, training for state teams
- Partnerships with experienced C.B.Os and resource
state societies - Similar strategy was followed in Bihar
- Eventually these 100 blocks, and 1000 villages
become resource villages training centres and
immersion sites
13
14N.R.L.M - financial inclusion
-
- Access to credit key to coming out of poverty.
-
- A minimum of Rs.100,000 per family required, in
several doses over a period of 5 6 years. Of
this 90 has to come from financial institutions. - Financial inclusion at affordable cost holds the
key -
-
-
-
15Building pro-poor financial sector
-
- Strategic partnerships with banking sector -
intensive district adoption by select banks - SPV promoted by NABARD, SBI and State
Governments to finance S.H.Gs ( Karnataka) - Accessing Co-operative banks restructured after
Vaidyanathan committee recommendations - Promoting Financial intermediation by mature
S.H.G federations - A national bank for women S.H.Gs on the lines of
NABARD
16Building pro-poor financial sector
-
- Leverage IT and business correspondents models.
SHGs and federations as B.Cs - Facilitation support Bank Mitras, Financial
literacy and financial counseling - Interest subsidy on loans to S.H.Gs
- Micro insurance to cover life, health and assets
17National Rural Livelihoods Mission
- Four streams of livelihoods promotion
- coping with vulnerabilities debt bondage, food
insecurity, migration, health shocks - existing livelihoods stabilising and
expanding, making them sustainable - self employment - micro-enterprise development
- skilled wage employment - opportunities in
growing sectors of the economy
17
18strengthening existing livelihoods
- Critical livelihoods are agriculture, livestock,
forestry and non-timber forest produce - Promote institutions around livelihoods
- Promote end-to-end solutions, covering the entire
value chain - Key knowledge dissemination. Development of
community professionals in a large number
19strengthening existing livelihoods
- Community managed sustainable agriculture holds
immense promise - A family can secure additional annual incomes of
Rs.50,000 with 0.5 1.0 acre of land ( 0.25 to
0.50 acre irrigated 0.50 to 0.75 acre rainfed
lands ) - Natural farming, multi layer, poly crop models
for food security and sustainable livelihoods - Convergence with MG NREGS to improve soil and
moisture conservation, and, soil fertility
20Mahila Kisan Sashaktikaran Pariyojana (MKSP)
- MKSP to improve the present status of women in
Agriculture, and to enhance the opportunities for
her empowerment. - MKSP is a sub component of the National Rural
Livelihood Mission (NRLM) - The primary objective of the MKSP is to empower
women in agriculture by strengthening community
institutions of poor women farmers and leverage
their strength to promote sustainable agriulture.
21MKSP Non-Negotiables
- Strong Community institutions of Women farmers
- Community managed Sustainable Agriculture - Low
cost sustainable practices such as NPM/ IPM/
Integrated Nutrient Management - Promoting and enhancing food and nutritional
security at Household and Community level - Drudgery reduction for women farmers
- Focus on landless, small and marginal farmers as
project participants - Value addition and marketing
- Resilience to climate change
22Promotion of Livelihoods in the primary sector
- Similar schemes will be formulated for
Livestock, dairying, N.T.F.P, Fisheries, handloom
sector - Learnings from these pilots will feed into the
strategies for N.R.L.M
23skill development and placement
- Up-scaling Skill development and placement
through public-private partnerships 1.0 crore
youth over a period of 5 years - Special initiatives for JK, IAP Districts (60),
Minority concentrated districts and North East
24Progress till 2010-11
- Skills and placement projects through private
sector and N.G.Os - initiated in 2006. 15 of
SGSY/NRLM allocation set apart for Special
Projects. - Under this component 148 placement projects
sanctioned to cover 11.50 lakh beneficiaries
(Total investment Rs. 1655 Cr. approx.)
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11
Projects approved 1 15 66 61
Beneficiaries 24,000 1,65,000 4,34,000 4,20,000
Total cost (crore) 10.81 140.20 634.32 797.01
Funds released(Cr.) 16.21 49.96 158.10 253.89
Beneficiaries Trained Placed 22,000 18,000 18,000 14,500 80,000 55,000 1,40,000 1,10,000
24
25Special Skills and Placement Mission in JK
- Jk Jobs Project was approved by Cabinet on May
19, 2011, as a 100 Central assisted scheme. - This scheme will cover all youth from rural and
urban areas, and, BPL and non-BPL category in
JK. - 1 lakh JK youth will be trained for salaried and
self-employment in the next 5 years. - MoRD will take first year (July 2011 to June
2012) as a year of experimentation to try out new
models -
26Self employment and micro enterprise development
- Entrepreneurship development among local youth to
generate in situ employment - 5 6 million micro-entrepreneurs
- Successful RUDSETI model will be replicated
MoU with RUDSETI - Other innovations Kerala KUDUMBASREE (
community EDP trainers)
27convergence and partnerships
- Convergence institutions of poor provide a
platform for convergence and optimisation of all
anti-poverty programmes - Linkages with PRIs
- Partnerships with N.G.Os and CSOs
- Partnerships with resource C.B.Os and resource
state agencies ( S.E.R.P, KUDUMBASREE, BRLPS)
27
28Partnerships for livelihoods
- Partnerships with industries, industry
associations for skills and placement,
micro-enterprise development, and, marketing
support for agri-forest produce - Different thematic groups will be set up, like
agro-processing, garmenting, hospitality,
automobiles, construction, IT services, etc.
28
29sensitive support mechanism
- Dedicated sensitive support structures at all
levels to trigger social mobilisation. - A national mission management unit
- State wide sensitive support structure, full
time dedicated head of the mission - Positioning multi-disciplinary team of trained
and competent professionals at state, district
and sub-district level - Quality human resources from open market and from
Govt.
29
30Accountability
- Extensive use of I.T for transparency and real
time monitoring - Databases of S.H.Gs and members
- Link with BPL data base
- Accountability Systems
- Regular meetings of S.H.Gs and federations
financial transactions read out in the meeting - Social audit for transparency and accountability
31RESULTS MONITORING
- Computerised MIS submission and sanction of
proposals and online monitoring centre to
states to districts - Periodic monitoring by teams of experts visiting
states - Baseline and impact evaluation by independent
agencies - Large scale independent study panel data -
monitoring same households, once a year over 10
years
32NRLM implementation
- Implementation
- Process intensive hence phased implementation
- Intensive implementation starts with 10 blocks
in the country they are developed as resource
blocks. - Social capital from the 1st phase blocks enables
organic scaling in the rest of the blocks in a
phased manner all 6000 blocks in 7 years
32
33NRLM - ACTION TAKEN BY MoRD
- Framework for Implementation prepared.
- States to prepare their action plans ( State
perspective plan and Annual action plan) - Funds for preparatory activities released
- World Bank loan of 1.0 billion negotiated
- Workshops held preparation of state action
plans, Strategy in intensive and non-intensive
blocks, procurement procedures, HR Policy and
recruitment procedures - Secretarys letters to all C.S s 3 times
34Transition from SGSY to NRLM
- Basic requirement for states
- State Govt. approval for setting up of a society
or using an existing society - Setting up of a State Society
- Appointment of a full time CEO
- Recruitment of professionals at SPMU and Govt
approval for recruitment in the first phase
districts - Preparation of SPIP
- SGSY will cease to exist after 31st December,
2011
35Progress under NRLM - Setting up of Society
SRLM formed SRLM formed SRLM to be formed by Sep. 2011 SRLM to be formed after Sep. 2011 (by Dec. 2011)
Andhra Pradesh Bihar Gujarat Kerala Orissa Tamil Nadu Madhya Pradesh Rajasthan Puduchery Punjab Haryana Himachal Pradesh Tripura Sikkim Assam JK Karnataka Maharashtra West Bengal Chhatisgarh Jharkhand Uttarakhand Meghalaya Uttar Pradesh Nagaland Mizoram Manipur Arunachal Pradesh Andaman Nicobar Daman Diu DadraNH Goa Lakshadweep
36NRLM Progress Deputing CEO
Full time CEO An in-charge Officer is working
Andhra Pradesh Bihar Gujarat Kerala Madhya Pradesh Odisha Rajasthan Tamil Nadu Chattisgarh Puducherry Sikkim Punjab Tripura
37N.R.L.M launched on June 3rd at Banswara,
Rajasthan
38Issue Suitable Name for NRLM
- Aajeevika
- Mahila Shakti
- Swavalamban
- Grama Shakti,
- Mahila Swashakti
- Samridhi
- Mahila Kranti
- Sampoorn
- Sanjeevani
39Issue Suggested Names for NRLM
- Abhyodaya
- Jana Jagriti
- Swa Shakti
- Ujwala
- Roshni
- Swarna Bharat
- Aalok,
- BhagyashreeÂ
- Abhilasha
- Biswas
- Navodaya
- Jiwan Aadhar
- Swachetna
40Issue setting up of committees
- N.R.L.M Advisory committee headed by Minister,
RD - N.R.L.M Co-ordination committee headed by
Secretary, RD - N.R.L.M Empowered committee for approving
state action plans
41Issue dedicated support structures
- Dedicated support structures a must to trigger
social mobilisation, institution building of the
poor, and livelihoods promotion - Poor should not be served poorly
- Best talent should work for the poor
- Working for the poor should be seen as an
attractive career option - Govt servants should not think that they have
been punished, when they are posted to N.R.L.M - Serious mismatch between outlay for programme
funds and funding support costs -
42Issue dedicated support structure
- Present provision of administrative cost is 5 of
program fund (excluding placement linked skill
development and RSETI component) is a serious
constraint - Professional support of multi-disclinary teams,
drawn from the open market and from the
Government is essential. - Good and dynamic HR policy ( Compensation and
other terms) to attract and retain the best - HR policy benchmarked with the best in the market
43Issue dedicated support structure
- National level EFC has not agreed to the
Ministrys request for setting up a National
level society for managing N.R.L.M - However need for a dedicated society at the
national level exists this will reduce the
learning curve for the states - This unit will shrink when states pick up
- Full time Mission Director essential. At
present JS, S.G.S.Y is also the Mission Director - Need for recruiting dedicated manpower, by paying
them market rates for development professionals
44Issue dedicated support structure
- State level except for A.P, T.N and Bihar
problems in each state as far as manning of the
missions is concerned - This is a serious issue in most of the states
45Issue target group of N.R.L.M
- Target group for N.R.L.M Present N.R.L.M
formulation - only those categorised as BPL. - In view of large exclusion errors in the present
BPL list, what should be the target group under
N.R.L.M - 2011 BPL enumeration - many of the previous
errors are expected to be fixed.
46IssueTarget group
- Two formulations
- All those who are not falling under automatic
exclusion - BPL list, plus,
- All those groups eligible under Category IV
MGNREGS works SC/STs, beneficiaries of land
reforms, beneficiaries of Indira Awas Yojana,
small farmers or marginal farmers as defined in
the Agriculture Debt Waiver and Debt Relief
Scheme, 2008 - Worked in MGNREGS 30 days for the last 2
years
47Issue Financial inclusion a serious challenge
- Poor performance of banks in lending to the
rural poor, including S.H.Gs. - Innovations required
- NBFC State Govt, banks and NABARD for
exclusively lending to S.H.Gs and S.H.G
Federations - Mature S.H.G federations to become CFIs
community owned financial institutions ( Mahila
banks)
48Issue Financial inclusion
- National bank for women S.H.Gs essential to
focus on the issues of rural poor women
49Issue Financial inclusion
- Interest subvention on the same lines as crop
loans to be taken with Finance Ministry ( DFS) - Support states to set up their own NBFC s to
finance S.H.Gs and S.H.G federations exclusively
to be taken up with Finance Ministry (DFS)
50Issue subsidies and administration of subsidies
- At present N.R.L.M provides for the following
subsidies - Revolving fund
- Capital subsidy
- Interest subsidy
- Restructuring the first 2 subsidies in view of
the negative experiences of S.G.S.Y. - Subsidies should strengthen the institutional
architecture and not weaken them
51Issue Role of subsidies and administration of
subsidies
- Who will administer the subsidies desirable to
delink subsidy administration from DRDAs - To make DRDAs focus on building quality
institutions of the poor - To create a level playing field for all S.H.Gs
and S.H.G federations to access grants whether
they are promoted by N.G.Os, DRDAs or banks - Alternative mechanisms Banks, NABARD ?
52Issue Placement linked skill development
programme
- To achieve the target of 1 crore job
opportunities for rural poor by the end of 12th
Five Year Plan - Present allocation is pegged at 15 of N.R.L.M
outlay this needs to be lifted - This needs to be lifted and we should be funded
for creating 1.0 crore jobs for BPL youth
53Strategy for IAP districts
- Special focus on states with large tribal
population and IAP districts - States to be advised to cover these districts
under intensive N.R.L.M in the next 2 years - Support to N.G.Os already working in these
districts - Saturation approach cover all families
- Formation of S.H.Gs and federations in all
villages - Creation of Social capital S.H.G and federation
leaders, community resource persons, village para
professionals
54Institution building IAP districts
- Financial inclusion a big challenge ??
- Agriculture livelihoods C.M.S.A strategy
- N.T.F.P livelihoods with forest dept.
- Convergence MG NREGS, N.R.L.M and Forest dept
funds - Securing land rights of the tribals para legal
approach - Focus on youth placement linked skill
development special scheme to be taken up on
the lines of the JK SEE programme