Authors:
Anshu Gupta, Virendra Singh
Addresses:
Department of Art and Humanities, IIMT University, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India. anshugupta301@gmail.com, drvirendraraghuvanshi@gmail.com
In 2005, India passed the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, which 200 districts implemented in February 2006. State programs were built using national guidelines. The 2008–09 fiscal year saw MGNREGA cover all of rural India. Every rural Indian household knows they can count on MGNREGA for 100 days of minimum-wage work. MGNREGA's three main goals are to empower Gramme Panchayats and Gramme Sabha by involving them in its planning and execution, to create productive assets in the economy and improve people's livelihoods, and to reinforce decentralised democracy by ensuring that every rural household demanding work receives 100 days of legally mandated minimum wage employment. The MGNREGA took effect on February 2, 2006. This innovative law guaranteed economic stability by giving a large percentage of the world the freedom to work. This research asserts MGNREGA's efficacy and progress towards its aims. The goal is to assess policy reliability and efficacy in 2022. The Ministry has not released a 2022 program assessment. The probe was based on data from the Ministry of Rural Development. The software offers various benefits, but none are favourable.
Keywords: Households Availed of Employment; Mahatma Gandhi NREGS; Achievements of MGNREGA; Cluster Facilitation Project; PMAY-G and DAY-NRLM; Gender Campaign; Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana.
Received on: 21/10/2023, Revised on: 30/12/2023, Accepted on: 05/02/2024, Published on: 09/03/2024
DOI: 10.69888/FTSSSL.2024.000218
FMDB Transactions on Sustainable Social Sciences Letters , 2024 Vol. 2 No. 1, Pages: 34-44