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RURAL DEVELOPMENT
     IN INDIA
The Concept of Rural Devt.
   Has changed in the past three decades
   Until 70’s RD was synonymous with agri. devt.
   80’s – ‘a strategy designed to improve the eco. and
    soc. life of a specific group of people – the rural poor ’
    
        Concerns were deepening rural poverty
       Changing concept of devt.
    
        Emergence of diversified rural economy
    
        Non-income dimensions of poverty recognised
   Today – Inclusive RD.
   Goes beyond growth , income and output
   Quality of life – health, edn, nutrition, living conditions
   Reduction in gender equalities
Challenges in Rural Development
   71% of India’s popn. is rural
   29% of rural popn. (>200 million people) is below
    the national poverty line.
   Rural poverty declined at 0.73% per year over the
    period 1993-2005, down from 0.81% in 1983-94.
   46% of rural children under five, 40% of adult
    women and 38% of adult men are underweight
    (compared to 33%, 25% and 26% for urban).
   59% are small and marginal farmers and landless
    labourers who depend on agriculture.
   Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, West
    Bengal and Bihar together account for 40% of India’s
    rural poor.
   16% of India’s population is classified as scheduled
    caste, and 8% as scheduled tribe. These groups are
    dominantly poor and rural and face particular socio-
    cultural barriers to development.

       Source: Compiled from various sources including National Census (2001),
        National Sample Survey, 61st round (2004/05); National Family Health Survey
        3 (2005/06); Mahendra Dev and Ravi ‘Poverty and Inequality: All India and
        States, 1983-2005’. Economic and PoliticalWeekly. (2007). pp 509-521.
Community Development Programme
Gandhian notion of CD
 
   Rural upliftment and reconstruction
 
   19 Point programme – Khadi & Village, Industries,
   Sanitation, Health care, Economic equity,
   Communal Harmony, Education, Women
   Empowerment
 CD assumed high propriety after independence
 
   1952 GOI launched 55 CD projects each covering
   300 villages / popn.of 30,000
 
   1953 National Extension Service project – similar
   objective, to cover larger areas
  Began as a comprehensive development effort to

   rebuild rural life and livelihood.
   CD blocks treated as admin. units for planning and
    devt. with separate budget.
   By first 5yr plan (1952-57) – 1114 blocks covering
    163,000 villages were operation
   By the sixties CDP covered the entire country
   Economic progress was core objective
   CDP was the main programme until the 3rd 5 Yr
    plan.
   Comprehensive in content
   Objective was to create conditions for high living
    standards and upliftment of rural poor
   Agriculture, Animal husbandry, Roads, Health,
    Education, Housing, Employment
Implementation Facets of CDPs
   Headed by a block development officer

    BDO assisted by eight Extension Officers
   One each for agriculture, animal husb, Panchayat, co-operation
    rural industries, rural engineering, social education, women and
    child welfare
   VLV – BDO – Dist. Collector – Devt
    Comssioner– Planning Commssion

    Govt officials prepared plan under Plng Commsn
   Initially no chance for community to demand any
    facility to solve their problem

    Later advisory committee
   1950s to mid 1970s – little achievement
   Economy slower compare to East and South- East
    Asian counterparts
   Land Reform Act 1956 – could not help poor and
    helpless esp. in North India
   Increase in poverty in late sixties and early seventies
   Govt compelled to import food grain
Panchayti Raj Institutions
   1957 Balwant Rai Mehta Commitee appointed to
    suggest measures to remove obstacles from CDP
    Three tier system of local Govt. –
       Gram Panchayat (Village level),
       Panchayat Samiti (Block level),
       Zilla Parishad (District level)
   The three-tier system aimed to link Govt. and elected
    representative.
   To decenterlise decision making
    To shift decision making closer to people and
    encourage their participation
    To place Bureaucracy under people’s control
   PRIs only partially able to meet these expections
   Elite capture of PRIs
   Welfare of weaker sections ignored

 Mid       60s
   Focus shifted to agriculture production
   Technological orientation to agriculture
   Central Govt. brings special Program's bypassing
    PRIs
       SFDA (Small Farmers Devt Agency),
   IAAP (Intensive Agricultural Programmes)
    
        IADP (Intensive Agricultural District Programme)
    
        TDA (Tribal Development Agency)
    
        MFAL (Marginal, Small Farmers and Agricultural
        Labourers Development Agency )
       Command Area Development,
       Drought Prone Area and Hill Area
   All these were financed and operated directly by the
    Central Govt.
   Agri initiative of late 60s increase food production
   Benefits reaped by rich, non-poor farmers in irrigated
    areas.
   Small and Marginal Farmers trailed
   Productivity increase from the Green Revolution in
    1970s- 80s, however, did reduce rural poverty
Integrated Rural Devt. Programme
 IRDP introduced in 1979 for rural poor and
  weaker sections of society
 Earlier Programmes relied on delivery systems
  which supressed self-reliance
 Shift from community devt. to schematised
  planning
   Linkage between infrastructure and employment
    scheme drawn
   Programme design has credit based self- employment
    activity and not as subsidy distribution exercise
   Decentralization of programme implementation through
    DRDA and Block Authority
   Sub schemes –
       Devt. Of women and children (DWCRA),
       Traning of Rural Youth for Self -employment (TRYSEM),
    
        National Rural Employment Programme (NREP),
    
        Jawahar Rojar Yojana (JRY)
   By Mid 80s – there are improvements in meeting the
    minimum needs of poor .
   Progress in Elementary education, Health, Water
    supply, Roads
   Still around 1993-94, was 32% of population was
    poor
   In SC & ST this was higher by 17-22%
   Small land holding , Landlessness, Illiteracy were key
    factors
Decentralized Planning For Rural Devt.
   Based on Sivaraman Committee report, Planning
    Comn. urged states in 1987 to consider Block as unit
    of Planning
   At Dist. level District Planning and Development
    council / District planning Board – has elected and
    nominated reps headed by a minister or district
    collector or a non official
   It planned, coordinated, monitored, reviewed, and
    finalized plan at block level
   However people’s participation were still limited
   Gap between Bureaucracy and people

Panchayati Raj Reforms
      73rd amendment in 1992
   Empowered PRIs to participate in devt. and
    decentralized planning
   Dependency of villagers on Govt. officials and
    machinery reduced
   29 items of Devt. Transferred to PRIs –
       Agriculture
       Forestry and Envt.
       Industry infrastructure,
       Minimum needs
       Social welfare
       Poverty alleviation
       Maint. of community assets
   More than 34 lakh elected reps of Panchayats
   Broadest rep. base in any country in world
   Reservation for weaker section & women
   Gram sabha – Forum for discussion and annual
    planning
   Self help groups 9th five year plan(1997-2002)
Between 1990 and present Phase
 Liberal economic policies and reforms
  introduced in the early 1990s
 Driven by rapid growth in the manufacturing
  and service sectors
 Growth rate in agriculture has declined since
  1997 and remains low.
 The share of agriculture in GDP has declined
  from 43% in 1970 to 22% in 2004.
 Public investment in irrigation has fallen
Thrust areas
   Economy growing at around 8%
   Paradigm policy shift in rural development - rural poor
    treated as resource, an integral part of the devt. strategy,
    and not as a burden
   Objectives are to
    
        Bridging the rural-urban divide.
    
        Guaranteeing wage employment and ensuring food security
    
        Making rural people the arbiters of their own destiny and to
        provide for their economic uplift by self employment
    
        Creating rural infrastructure for better economic
        opportunities and growth
    
        Ensuring dignified living – shelter,water, clean envt.
    
        Restoring lost or depleted productivity of the land for better
        livelihood opportunities
    Approved outlay
    1st 2 yrs of 11th Plan (2007- 2012)
    Rs 36560 crores and 42400 crores
Bharat Nirman
 Under Bharat Nirman, developmental works are
  undertaken in the areas of irrigation, road, rural
  housing, rural water supply, rural electrification and
  rural telecommunication connectivity.
 Three of the goals of Bharat Nirman fall within the
  mandate of the Min. of Rural Development:
       rural connectivity
       rural housing
       rural water supply
 Specific targets so that there is accountability in the
  progress of this initiative.
 Bharat Nirman an effort to unlock rural India's
  growth potential and key for ushering a new era
 'National Common Minimum Programme' (NCMP)
Key Programmes
   'National Rural Employment Guarantee Act'2005
    (NREGA)
   Act guarantees 100 days of employment in a financial
    year to every household
   a social safety net for the vulnerable groups and an
    opportunity to combine growth with equity
   Structured towards harnessing the rural work-force, not
    as recipients of doles, but as productive partners in our
    economic process
   assets created result in sustained employment for the
    area for future growth employment and self-sufficiency
   Operationalised from 2nd February, 2006 in 200
    selected districts, extended to 130 more districts in 2007-
    08.
   The remaining districts (around 275) of the country under
    the ambit of NREGA from 1st of April, 2008
Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana
             (SGRY)
 launched  on 25th September 2001
 objectives of providing additional wage
  employment ensuring food security while
  creating durable community, social &
  economic infrastructure and assets in the
  rural areas
 SGRY along with National Food for Work
  Programme (NFFWP) have been
  subsumed in the NREGA districts
Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana
              (SGSY):
   Self employment programme for the rural poor.
   The assisted families (Swarozgaris) may be individuals
    or groups (Self-Help Groups).
   Emphasis is on the group approach
   To bring the assisted poor families above the poverty
    line by providing them income generating assets through
    a mix of bank credits and government subsidy
   Organization of poor into Self-Help Groups and taking
    care of training, credit, technology infrastructure and
    marketing
   Implemented by the District Rural Development
    Agencies (DRDAs) with the active participation of PRI’s
    the Banks, the line Departments, and NGO’s
Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana
                 (PMGSY)
   Launched December, 2000
   100% centrally sponsored scheme to provide
    connectivity to unconnected habitations
   Road connectivity to all habitations with a
    population of thousand (500 in case of hilly or
    tribal areas) with all weather roads by 2009
   Will lead to rural employment opportunities,
    better access to regulated and fair market, better
    access to health, education and other public
    services
   Bridge the rural-urban divide and pave the path
    of economic growth.
Indira Awas Yojana (IAY)
   Since 1985-86 to help build or upgrade homes
    to householdsbelow the poverty line
   Ceiling on construction assistance under the IAY
    currently is Rs. 25,000/- per unit for the plain
    areas and Rs.27,500/- for the hilly
    terrains/difficult areas
   To impart transparency to the selection process
    of beneficiaries, a 'permanent waitlist' is being
    prepared under IAY.
   60 lakh houses are to be constructed in a period
    of 4 year from 2005-06
   Against this overall target, 15.52 lakh were built
    in 2005-06 and 14.98 lakh homes in 2006-07
National Social Assistance Programme
                (NSAP)
   To provide public assistance to its citizens in case of
    unemployment, old age, sickness and disablement within
    the limit of the economic capacity of the State
   Launched for fulfillment of this obligation in 1995-96.
    
        National Old Age Pension Scheme (NOAPS)
         • -Rs.200 per month from1st April 2006,
    
        National Family Benefit Scheme (NFBS)
    
        National Maternity Benefit Scheme (NMBS).
    
        (IGNOAPS) launched on 19.11.2007
         • citizens above the age of 65 years and living below the poverty line
   Annapurna Scheme for providing free good grains to the
    elderly
Accelerated Rural Water Supply Programme
        ARWSP
   Central government supplements States’ efforts
    for providing safe drinking water and sanitation
    by providing financial and technical assistance
    under two centrally sponsored programmes
    
        'Accelerated Rural Water Supply' (ARWSP)
    
        'Central Rural Sanitation Programme' (CRSP).
       By 2009, 55,067 uncovered, 3.31 lakh slipped back
        and 2.17 lakh quality affected habitations are to be
        addressed
    
        approximately 6 lakhs habitations where water supply
        is a problem to be covered
'Total Sanitation Campaign' (TSC)
   'Central Rural Sanitation Programme‘ (CRSP)
    launched in 1986 aims at improving the quality
    of life of the rural poor and to provide privacy
    and dignity to women in rural areas.
    In 1999, 'Total Sanitation Campaign' (TSC)
    under restructured CRSP was launched to
    promote sanitation in rural areas.
   Follows participatory demand-responsive
    approach, educating the rural households about
    the benefits of proper sanitation and hygiene
Selected Institutions
National Institute of Rural Development (NIRD)
  More than 50 years of existence is an apex
  body for undertaking.
 Training
 Research
 Action research
 Consultancy functions
Council for Advancement of People’s Action and
  Rural Technology (CAPART) Founded in 1986

 For improving the quality of life in the rural areas, particularly
  the poor and socially disadvantaged . People below the
  poverty line, scheduled castes and tribes, bonded labour,
  women and people with disabilities are priority focus groups
  for CAPART.

The major goals of CAPART are:
To support voluntary organisations in implementing projects for
    sustainable development in rural areas.
• To act as a national nodal point for development and
  promotion of appropriate rural technologies.
• To promote and support voluntary action and people's
  participation for rural development, through capacity-building
  for voluntary organisations and rural communities.
   To act as a data bank and clearing house for information on
    the voluntary sector, rural technologies and rural
    development.
   Facilitating community action for development.
   Building awareness on critical development issues.
   Building and strengthening village-level people and
    organisations.
   Promoting the development and dissemination of appropriate
    rural technologies.
   Strengthening the capacities of voluntary organisations in
    rural areas.
   Creating employment opportunities and economic self-
    reliance.
   Creation of community assets and fulfilment of basic needs.
   Conservation and regeneration of the environment and natural
    resources.
   Enabling women, persons with disabilities and other
    disadvantaged groups to participate in development
End note


“The long arms of the states shortening and the reach of
  the market forces is being extended but unevenly…
  The question is no longer whether decentralised
  collective action can be effective, but under what
  circumstances it is appropriate, and how positive
  synergy between the state, market and civil
  organisations can most efficiently and fairly supply
  public goods…
                          --------Norman Uphoff
III Review of Rural Development
             Programmes in India
   Broad features for Rural Development Programmes in
    Five Year Plans
   Began as a comprehensive development effort to rebuild
    rural life and livelihood.
   Community Development Programme was the main
    programme until the Third Five year plan.
   Became a bundle of special programmes with focus on
    poverty alleviation.
   RDP has also been a top-down centrally guided and
    centrally sponsored programme.
   Hardly any state government has made special resource
    commitment for RD Programmes.
   A large body of literature shows limited impact on poverty
    removal / reduction through RDP.
C. D. P. as a Mini Plan for RD Provision in the 2ndFive Year Plan
                                            Rs. In Crore
1.Personnel and Equipments                  52
2.Agricultural, Animal Husbandry,
Minor Irrigation land reclamation etc.      55
3.Communication                             18
4.Rural Arts and Crafts                      5
5.Education                                 12
6.Social Education                          10
7.Health and Sanitation                     20
8.Housing (Project Staff + Rural Housing)   16
9.CD Centre                                 12
TOTAL                                       200
4.2% of total plan outlay.
3,100 blocks and 3,70,000 villages were covered by the beginning of the
third plan.
1crore= 10 million
Features of Community Development as National
                 Extension Programme

   Areas of intensive efforts for over all development of social
    and economic life.
   Different development agencies of Government to work as a
    team.
   Villagers came together for bringing about social changes are
    assisted to seek and enable their participation in execution of
    economic development programs self-help and co-operation
    are recognised as principles to guide.
   Cover all rural families especially those who are
    "underprivileged".
Co-operatives –Co-operative farming


 Development Panchayats actively responsible
 Landholding consolidation / Land Reforms Agricultural.
 Development Small and village industry
 Women and Youth get special focus

   Intensive work in Tribal area
Third Five Year Plan(1961-66)
   The village production plan Glimpses of Sustainable economic
    development?
   Agricultural Production Programs
   Full utilisation of irrigation facilities
    by maintaining field channels
   repair and maintain commu. Irrigation works.
   increases area under multiple cropping.
   spread of improved seeds
   composting and green manure, fertilisers
   Improved agricultural practices –Soil conservation, contourbunding,
    dry farming, drainage, land reclamation, plant protection.
   individual and community minor irrigation projects
   improved implements
   production of vegetables and fruits
 Development of poultry, fish, dairy
 Animal Husbandry –stud bulls castration
 Development of Village fuel plantation and
   pastures.
• Panchayat Development Socio-political
• DPAP –DDP Focus on Natural Resources
 􀂄 Aims:
• Optimum utilisation of land, water and
   livestock resources.
• Restoration of ecological balance
• Stabilising the income of poor
• Arrest desertification advancement
Key Elements:


1. Development & Management of water
    resources
2. Soil and Moisture conservation
3. Afforestation–Social + Farm forestry
4. Development of pasture lands
5. Livestock and dairy development
6. Restructuring cropping pattern
7. development subsidiary occupation
Financial Resources              Centre's share (50:50basis)
                                                   Rs.crores(10 million)

IRDP                             750
DPAP                             175 (Rs.15 lakhs per block)

DDP                              50
NREP                             980

       + Special Areas Programme�

        Water Resources -over exploited –crisis
        Land Resources -degradation on rise
        Forest Resources -degraded and under threat
        Common Property

         Resources     -Open access & degraded mostly
Fourth Five Year Plan(1969-74)

   By the end of 3rd Five Year Plan coverage is all
    villages in 5265 blocks
   Welding together Panchayati Raj and CD
   Balwant Rai MehtaCommittee –The three-tier system
    village, block, district link Government, and elected
    representative.
   Studies on Area Planning Concept of Growth Centre
    introduced growth centre to be promoted and woven
    into district plans.
Fifth Five Year Plan(1974-78)
The Slimmest Volume!
 In 1975 20 point programme is introduced.
 Community Development Programme does
  not find place in text and discussion.
Sixth Five Year Plan(1980-85)
RD Through Special Programmes
 Achievements in previous plan lauded
  Network of extension and development service established
    Land reforms successful

   
      Rural community aware and ready to adopt technical advances (GRT
      adoption as evidence).
   
      Special area programmes introduced.
   
      DPAP mid 1970s Drought Areas
    DDP late 1970s Desert Areas

 SFDA, MFAL since 1971 Small, marginal farmers and Agricultural
  labourers.
 RD to focus on special employment and income generation
  programmes for poor. Focus shifted to individual Household based
  support.
 All individual / Household Programme merged and Integrated Rural
  Development Programme is born (IRDP).
Seventh Five Year Plan(1985-90)
“The approach to the Seventh Plan reiterates
 the goal of bringing down the percentage of
 population below the poverty line to less than
 10 by 1994-95”
 …Therefore, the special programmes will be
 continued at an accelerated rate.
Eighth Five Year Plan(1992-97)

List of Programmes Reviewed           �
   IRDP           (1980)
   TRYSEM         (1979)
   DWCRA          (1982)
   NREP           (1980)
   RLEGP          (1983)
   JRY            (1990)
   MEGS           (1971-72) Maharashtra
   SEPG           (1991) Gujarat
   DPAP           (1973)
   DDP(1978)

    Voluntary sector to help. Rest same as 7thF.Y.P.
Ninth Five Year Plan(1997-02)
Introduction of Integrated Watershed Development Programmes
 DPAP, DDP + People in Centre
 Contradictions between Agricultural Irrigation and RD Programmes
 Impact of GRT (agro mechanical + bio-chemical) on
   ecological/environmental parameters.
 District Planning and RD Programmes
 People as if they matter
 Assessment of local area, resource base, people –existing situation.
 Natural Resource base as unit for improving resource productivity.
 Use of individual, social, local and indigenous knowledge.
 Formulation of sustainable development plans.
 Community Development Facilitation.
Tenth Five Year Plan(2002-07)
Strategy for Equity and Social Justice
 “Agricultural Development must be viewed as a core element
  of plan, since growth in this sector is likely to lead to the
  widest spread of benefits especially to the rural poor. The first
  generation of reforms concentrated on the industrial economy
  and reforms in the agricultural sector were neglected. This
  must change in the Tenth Plan.”

                                                 Box 1.3, p.9, Volume-I
                                          
                                              Five Year Plan 2002-2007
                                                      P.C.GoI, 2002
Growth Strategy
   Creating Gainful Employment Opportunities
   Deal with policy constraints that discourage growth
    in employment.
   Agriculture in extended sense
   Tourism, Transport Special Programs
   Retailing
   SSI
   IT & Communication –enabled service
   Other New services

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Final rural-development-in-india

  • 1. RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN INDIA
  • 2. The Concept of Rural Devt.  Has changed in the past three decades  Until 70’s RD was synonymous with agri. devt.  80’s – ‘a strategy designed to improve the eco. and soc. life of a specific group of people – the rural poor ’  Concerns were deepening rural poverty  Changing concept of devt.  Emergence of diversified rural economy  Non-income dimensions of poverty recognised  Today – Inclusive RD.  Goes beyond growth , income and output  Quality of life – health, edn, nutrition, living conditions  Reduction in gender equalities
  • 3. Challenges in Rural Development  71% of India’s popn. is rural  29% of rural popn. (>200 million people) is below the national poverty line.  Rural poverty declined at 0.73% per year over the period 1993-2005, down from 0.81% in 1983-94.  46% of rural children under five, 40% of adult women and 38% of adult men are underweight (compared to 33%, 25% and 26% for urban).  59% are small and marginal farmers and landless labourers who depend on agriculture.
  • 4. Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, West Bengal and Bihar together account for 40% of India’s rural poor.  16% of India’s population is classified as scheduled caste, and 8% as scheduled tribe. These groups are dominantly poor and rural and face particular socio- cultural barriers to development.  Source: Compiled from various sources including National Census (2001), National Sample Survey, 61st round (2004/05); National Family Health Survey 3 (2005/06); Mahendra Dev and Ravi ‘Poverty and Inequality: All India and States, 1983-2005’. Economic and PoliticalWeekly. (2007). pp 509-521.
  • 5. Community Development Programme Gandhian notion of CD  Rural upliftment and reconstruction  19 Point programme – Khadi & Village, Industries, Sanitation, Health care, Economic equity, Communal Harmony, Education, Women Empowerment CD assumed high propriety after independence  1952 GOI launched 55 CD projects each covering 300 villages / popn.of 30,000  1953 National Extension Service project – similar objective, to cover larger areas  Began as a comprehensive development effort to rebuild rural life and livelihood.
  • 6. CD blocks treated as admin. units for planning and devt. with separate budget.  By first 5yr plan (1952-57) – 1114 blocks covering 163,000 villages were operation  By the sixties CDP covered the entire country  Economic progress was core objective  CDP was the main programme until the 3rd 5 Yr plan.  Comprehensive in content  Objective was to create conditions for high living standards and upliftment of rural poor  Agriculture, Animal husbandry, Roads, Health, Education, Housing, Employment
  • 7. Implementation Facets of CDPs  Headed by a block development officer  BDO assisted by eight Extension Officers  One each for agriculture, animal husb, Panchayat, co-operation rural industries, rural engineering, social education, women and child welfare  VLV – BDO – Dist. Collector – Devt Comssioner– Planning Commssion  Govt officials prepared plan under Plng Commsn  Initially no chance for community to demand any facility to solve their problem  Later advisory committee
  • 8. 1950s to mid 1970s – little achievement  Economy slower compare to East and South- East Asian counterparts  Land Reform Act 1956 – could not help poor and helpless esp. in North India  Increase in poverty in late sixties and early seventies  Govt compelled to import food grain
  • 9. Panchayti Raj Institutions  1957 Balwant Rai Mehta Commitee appointed to suggest measures to remove obstacles from CDP  Three tier system of local Govt. –  Gram Panchayat (Village level),  Panchayat Samiti (Block level),  Zilla Parishad (District level)  The three-tier system aimed to link Govt. and elected representative.  To decenterlise decision making  To shift decision making closer to people and encourage their participation  To place Bureaucracy under people’s control
  • 10. PRIs only partially able to meet these expections  Elite capture of PRIs  Welfare of weaker sections ignored  Mid 60s  Focus shifted to agriculture production  Technological orientation to agriculture  Central Govt. brings special Program's bypassing PRIs  SFDA (Small Farmers Devt Agency),
  • 11. IAAP (Intensive Agricultural Programmes)  IADP (Intensive Agricultural District Programme)  TDA (Tribal Development Agency)  MFAL (Marginal, Small Farmers and Agricultural Labourers Development Agency )  Command Area Development,  Drought Prone Area and Hill Area  All these were financed and operated directly by the Central Govt.  Agri initiative of late 60s increase food production  Benefits reaped by rich, non-poor farmers in irrigated areas.  Small and Marginal Farmers trailed  Productivity increase from the Green Revolution in 1970s- 80s, however, did reduce rural poverty
  • 12. Integrated Rural Devt. Programme  IRDP introduced in 1979 for rural poor and weaker sections of society  Earlier Programmes relied on delivery systems which supressed self-reliance  Shift from community devt. to schematised planning
  • 13. Linkage between infrastructure and employment scheme drawn  Programme design has credit based self- employment activity and not as subsidy distribution exercise  Decentralization of programme implementation through DRDA and Block Authority  Sub schemes –  Devt. Of women and children (DWCRA),  Traning of Rural Youth for Self -employment (TRYSEM),  National Rural Employment Programme (NREP),  Jawahar Rojar Yojana (JRY)
  • 14. By Mid 80s – there are improvements in meeting the minimum needs of poor .  Progress in Elementary education, Health, Water supply, Roads  Still around 1993-94, was 32% of population was poor  In SC & ST this was higher by 17-22%  Small land holding , Landlessness, Illiteracy were key factors
  • 15. Decentralized Planning For Rural Devt.  Based on Sivaraman Committee report, Planning Comn. urged states in 1987 to consider Block as unit of Planning  At Dist. level District Planning and Development council / District planning Board – has elected and nominated reps headed by a minister or district collector or a non official  It planned, coordinated, monitored, reviewed, and finalized plan at block level
  • 16. However people’s participation were still limited  Gap between Bureaucracy and people Panchayati Raj Reforms  73rd amendment in 1992  Empowered PRIs to participate in devt. and decentralized planning  Dependency of villagers on Govt. officials and machinery reduced
  • 17. 29 items of Devt. Transferred to PRIs –  Agriculture  Forestry and Envt.  Industry infrastructure,  Minimum needs  Social welfare  Poverty alleviation  Maint. of community assets  More than 34 lakh elected reps of Panchayats  Broadest rep. base in any country in world  Reservation for weaker section & women  Gram sabha – Forum for discussion and annual planning  Self help groups 9th five year plan(1997-2002)
  • 18. Between 1990 and present Phase  Liberal economic policies and reforms introduced in the early 1990s  Driven by rapid growth in the manufacturing and service sectors  Growth rate in agriculture has declined since 1997 and remains low.  The share of agriculture in GDP has declined from 43% in 1970 to 22% in 2004.  Public investment in irrigation has fallen
  • 19. Thrust areas  Economy growing at around 8%  Paradigm policy shift in rural development - rural poor treated as resource, an integral part of the devt. strategy, and not as a burden  Objectives are to  Bridging the rural-urban divide.  Guaranteeing wage employment and ensuring food security  Making rural people the arbiters of their own destiny and to provide for their economic uplift by self employment  Creating rural infrastructure for better economic opportunities and growth  Ensuring dignified living – shelter,water, clean envt.  Restoring lost or depleted productivity of the land for better livelihood opportunities Approved outlay 1st 2 yrs of 11th Plan (2007- 2012) Rs 36560 crores and 42400 crores
  • 20. Bharat Nirman  Under Bharat Nirman, developmental works are undertaken in the areas of irrigation, road, rural housing, rural water supply, rural electrification and rural telecommunication connectivity.  Three of the goals of Bharat Nirman fall within the mandate of the Min. of Rural Development:  rural connectivity  rural housing  rural water supply  Specific targets so that there is accountability in the progress of this initiative.  Bharat Nirman an effort to unlock rural India's growth potential and key for ushering a new era  'National Common Minimum Programme' (NCMP)
  • 21. Key Programmes  'National Rural Employment Guarantee Act'2005 (NREGA)  Act guarantees 100 days of employment in a financial year to every household  a social safety net for the vulnerable groups and an opportunity to combine growth with equity  Structured towards harnessing the rural work-force, not as recipients of doles, but as productive partners in our economic process  assets created result in sustained employment for the area for future growth employment and self-sufficiency  Operationalised from 2nd February, 2006 in 200 selected districts, extended to 130 more districts in 2007- 08.  The remaining districts (around 275) of the country under the ambit of NREGA from 1st of April, 2008
  • 22. Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana (SGRY)  launched on 25th September 2001  objectives of providing additional wage employment ensuring food security while creating durable community, social & economic infrastructure and assets in the rural areas  SGRY along with National Food for Work Programme (NFFWP) have been subsumed in the NREGA districts
  • 23. Swarnjayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana (SGSY):  Self employment programme for the rural poor.  The assisted families (Swarozgaris) may be individuals or groups (Self-Help Groups).  Emphasis is on the group approach  To bring the assisted poor families above the poverty line by providing them income generating assets through a mix of bank credits and government subsidy  Organization of poor into Self-Help Groups and taking care of training, credit, technology infrastructure and marketing  Implemented by the District Rural Development Agencies (DRDAs) with the active participation of PRI’s the Banks, the line Departments, and NGO’s
  • 24. Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY)  Launched December, 2000  100% centrally sponsored scheme to provide connectivity to unconnected habitations  Road connectivity to all habitations with a population of thousand (500 in case of hilly or tribal areas) with all weather roads by 2009  Will lead to rural employment opportunities, better access to regulated and fair market, better access to health, education and other public services  Bridge the rural-urban divide and pave the path of economic growth.
  • 25. Indira Awas Yojana (IAY)  Since 1985-86 to help build or upgrade homes to householdsbelow the poverty line  Ceiling on construction assistance under the IAY currently is Rs. 25,000/- per unit for the plain areas and Rs.27,500/- for the hilly terrains/difficult areas  To impart transparency to the selection process of beneficiaries, a 'permanent waitlist' is being prepared under IAY.  60 lakh houses are to be constructed in a period of 4 year from 2005-06  Against this overall target, 15.52 lakh were built in 2005-06 and 14.98 lakh homes in 2006-07
  • 26. National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP)  To provide public assistance to its citizens in case of unemployment, old age, sickness and disablement within the limit of the economic capacity of the State  Launched for fulfillment of this obligation in 1995-96.  National Old Age Pension Scheme (NOAPS) • -Rs.200 per month from1st April 2006,  National Family Benefit Scheme (NFBS)  National Maternity Benefit Scheme (NMBS).  (IGNOAPS) launched on 19.11.2007 • citizens above the age of 65 years and living below the poverty line  Annapurna Scheme for providing free good grains to the elderly
  • 27. Accelerated Rural Water Supply Programme ARWSP  Central government supplements States’ efforts for providing safe drinking water and sanitation by providing financial and technical assistance under two centrally sponsored programmes  'Accelerated Rural Water Supply' (ARWSP)  'Central Rural Sanitation Programme' (CRSP).  By 2009, 55,067 uncovered, 3.31 lakh slipped back and 2.17 lakh quality affected habitations are to be addressed  approximately 6 lakhs habitations where water supply is a problem to be covered
  • 28. 'Total Sanitation Campaign' (TSC)  'Central Rural Sanitation Programme‘ (CRSP) launched in 1986 aims at improving the quality of life of the rural poor and to provide privacy and dignity to women in rural areas.  In 1999, 'Total Sanitation Campaign' (TSC) under restructured CRSP was launched to promote sanitation in rural areas.  Follows participatory demand-responsive approach, educating the rural households about the benefits of proper sanitation and hygiene
  • 29. Selected Institutions National Institute of Rural Development (NIRD) More than 50 years of existence is an apex body for undertaking.  Training  Research  Action research  Consultancy functions
  • 30. Council for Advancement of People’s Action and Rural Technology (CAPART) Founded in 1986 For improving the quality of life in the rural areas, particularly the poor and socially disadvantaged . People below the poverty line, scheduled castes and tribes, bonded labour, women and people with disabilities are priority focus groups for CAPART. The major goals of CAPART are: To support voluntary organisations in implementing projects for sustainable development in rural areas. • To act as a national nodal point for development and promotion of appropriate rural technologies. • To promote and support voluntary action and people's participation for rural development, through capacity-building for voluntary organisations and rural communities.
  • 31. To act as a data bank and clearing house for information on the voluntary sector, rural technologies and rural development.  Facilitating community action for development.  Building awareness on critical development issues.  Building and strengthening village-level people and organisations.  Promoting the development and dissemination of appropriate rural technologies.  Strengthening the capacities of voluntary organisations in rural areas.  Creating employment opportunities and economic self- reliance.  Creation of community assets and fulfilment of basic needs.  Conservation and regeneration of the environment and natural resources.  Enabling women, persons with disabilities and other disadvantaged groups to participate in development
  • 32. End note “The long arms of the states shortening and the reach of the market forces is being extended but unevenly… The question is no longer whether decentralised collective action can be effective, but under what circumstances it is appropriate, and how positive synergy between the state, market and civil organisations can most efficiently and fairly supply public goods… --------Norman Uphoff
  • 33. III Review of Rural Development Programmes in India  Broad features for Rural Development Programmes in Five Year Plans  Began as a comprehensive development effort to rebuild rural life and livelihood.  Community Development Programme was the main programme until the Third Five year plan.  Became a bundle of special programmes with focus on poverty alleviation.  RDP has also been a top-down centrally guided and centrally sponsored programme.  Hardly any state government has made special resource commitment for RD Programmes.  A large body of literature shows limited impact on poverty removal / reduction through RDP.
  • 34. C. D. P. as a Mini Plan for RD Provision in the 2ndFive Year Plan Rs. In Crore 1.Personnel and Equipments 52 2.Agricultural, Animal Husbandry, Minor Irrigation land reclamation etc. 55 3.Communication 18 4.Rural Arts and Crafts 5 5.Education 12 6.Social Education 10 7.Health and Sanitation 20 8.Housing (Project Staff + Rural Housing) 16 9.CD Centre 12 TOTAL 200 4.2% of total plan outlay. 3,100 blocks and 3,70,000 villages were covered by the beginning of the third plan. 1crore= 10 million
  • 35. Features of Community Development as National Extension Programme  Areas of intensive efforts for over all development of social and economic life.  Different development agencies of Government to work as a team.  Villagers came together for bringing about social changes are assisted to seek and enable their participation in execution of economic development programs self-help and co-operation are recognised as principles to guide.  Cover all rural families especially those who are "underprivileged".
  • 36. Co-operatives –Co-operative farming  Development Panchayats actively responsible  Landholding consolidation / Land Reforms Agricultural.  Development Small and village industry  Women and Youth get special focus  Intensive work in Tribal area
  • 37. Third Five Year Plan(1961-66)  The village production plan Glimpses of Sustainable economic development?  Agricultural Production Programs  Full utilisation of irrigation facilities by maintaining field channels  repair and maintain commu. Irrigation works.  increases area under multiple cropping.  spread of improved seeds  composting and green manure, fertilisers  Improved agricultural practices –Soil conservation, contourbunding, dry farming, drainage, land reclamation, plant protection.  individual and community minor irrigation projects  improved implements  production of vegetables and fruits
  • 38.  Development of poultry, fish, dairy  Animal Husbandry –stud bulls castration  Development of Village fuel plantation and pastures. • Panchayat Development Socio-political • DPAP –DDP Focus on Natural Resources 􀂄 Aims: • Optimum utilisation of land, water and livestock resources. • Restoration of ecological balance • Stabilising the income of poor • Arrest desertification advancement
  • 39. Key Elements: 1. Development & Management of water resources 2. Soil and Moisture conservation 3. Afforestation–Social + Farm forestry 4. Development of pasture lands 5. Livestock and dairy development 6. Restructuring cropping pattern 7. development subsidiary occupation
  • 40. Financial Resources Centre's share (50:50basis) Rs.crores(10 million) IRDP 750 DPAP 175 (Rs.15 lakhs per block) DDP 50 NREP 980 + Special Areas Programme�  Water Resources -over exploited –crisis  Land Resources -degradation on rise  Forest Resources -degraded and under threat  Common Property Resources -Open access & degraded mostly
  • 41. Fourth Five Year Plan(1969-74)  By the end of 3rd Five Year Plan coverage is all villages in 5265 blocks  Welding together Panchayati Raj and CD  Balwant Rai MehtaCommittee –The three-tier system village, block, district link Government, and elected representative.  Studies on Area Planning Concept of Growth Centre introduced growth centre to be promoted and woven into district plans.
  • 42. Fifth Five Year Plan(1974-78) The Slimmest Volume!  In 1975 20 point programme is introduced.  Community Development Programme does not find place in text and discussion.
  • 43. Sixth Five Year Plan(1980-85) RD Through Special Programmes  Achievements in previous plan lauded Network of extension and development service established  Land reforms successful  Rural community aware and ready to adopt technical advances (GRT adoption as evidence).  Special area programmes introduced.  DPAP mid 1970s Drought Areas  DDP late 1970s Desert Areas  SFDA, MFAL since 1971 Small, marginal farmers and Agricultural labourers.  RD to focus on special employment and income generation programmes for poor. Focus shifted to individual Household based support.  All individual / Household Programme merged and Integrated Rural Development Programme is born (IRDP).
  • 44. Seventh Five Year Plan(1985-90) “The approach to the Seventh Plan reiterates the goal of bringing down the percentage of population below the poverty line to less than 10 by 1994-95” …Therefore, the special programmes will be continued at an accelerated rate.
  • 45. Eighth Five Year Plan(1992-97) List of Programmes Reviewed �  IRDP (1980)  TRYSEM (1979)  DWCRA (1982)  NREP (1980)  RLEGP (1983)  JRY (1990)  MEGS (1971-72) Maharashtra  SEPG (1991) Gujarat  DPAP (1973)  DDP(1978) Voluntary sector to help. Rest same as 7thF.Y.P.
  • 46. Ninth Five Year Plan(1997-02) Introduction of Integrated Watershed Development Programmes  DPAP, DDP + People in Centre  Contradictions between Agricultural Irrigation and RD Programmes  Impact of GRT (agro mechanical + bio-chemical) on ecological/environmental parameters.  District Planning and RD Programmes  People as if they matter  Assessment of local area, resource base, people –existing situation.  Natural Resource base as unit for improving resource productivity.  Use of individual, social, local and indigenous knowledge.  Formulation of sustainable development plans.  Community Development Facilitation.
  • 47. Tenth Five Year Plan(2002-07) Strategy for Equity and Social Justice “Agricultural Development must be viewed as a core element of plan, since growth in this sector is likely to lead to the widest spread of benefits especially to the rural poor. The first generation of reforms concentrated on the industrial economy and reforms in the agricultural sector were neglected. This must change in the Tenth Plan.” Box 1.3, p.9, Volume-I  Five Year Plan 2002-2007 P.C.GoI, 2002
  • 48. Growth Strategy  Creating Gainful Employment Opportunities  Deal with policy constraints that discourage growth in employment.  Agriculture in extended sense  Tourism, Transport Special Programs  Retailing  SSI  IT & Communication –enabled service  Other New services