The Prime Minister's Office (PMO) today held an inter-ministerial meeting to discuss various provisions of the Employment Guarantee Act and pave the way for its speedy introduction in Parliament. |
Consultations with the states are expected to be held next month to seek their views on how best to provide employment guarantees to the poor. |
|
The meeting, attended by the ministries of law, rural development, labour and the Planning Commission, was held to discuss a list of options prepared by the rural development ministry. |
|
The PMO initiative comes ahead of a meeting of the National Advisory Council, which is also expected to take up the draft Bill. |
|
"The meeting is a bid to sort out inter-ministerial issues which could hold up introduction of the Act in Parliament during the Winter Session," said sources. |
|
The cost of providing the guarantee, in the initial stages, is likely to be in the range of Rs 8,000 crore and the focus will be on creation of non-capital-intensive assets which do not need mechanised inputs. |
|
The programme will begin in a few districts and then be extended gradually, over a period of 4-5 years, to cover the entire country. Once it is enforced all over the country, existing employment generation schemes and poverty alleviation programmes will be merged with the employment guarantee programme. |
|
Introduction of the National Employment Guarantee Act was a commitment made in the National Common Minimum Programme (NCMP) of the United Progressive Alliance government. |
|
The NCMP states that the Act is to provide "a legal guarantee for at least 100 days of employment, to begin with, on asset-creating public works programmes every year at minimum wages for at least one able-bodied person in every rural, urban poor and lower-middle class household. In the interim, a massive food-for-work programme will be started". |
|
|
|