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Like many countries in the world, India is mired in bureaucratic
rigidities and hierarchical structures of exploitation and
oppression, leading to a well-known problem of clogged pipes in the
complex system of public welfare services. It is widely recognised
that this clogged system requires innovative intervention, via
transparent policies that are able to avoid political capture. This
book reports on three overlapping pilot schemes in Madhya Pradesh
and Delhi, including a special project in tribal villages, in which
over 6,000 people were provided with a modest basic income paid
monthly over 18 months. The project was funded by UNICEF and UNDP
and implemented by SEWA (The Indian Self-Employed Women's
Association). Written by Guy Standing who designed the pilot
schemes and Renana Jhabvala, the head of SEWA, who implemented
them, the book examines the effects of these pilot schemes at the
individual, family and local economy levels. The pilots are
discussed in the context of the new Food Security Act, the
government's job guarantee plan, MGNREGA, and ongoing debate over
the efficacy of the Public Distribution System and its ration shops
disbursing rice, wheat, sugar and kerosene.The authors look at a
number of alternative options for addressing rural poverty,
including subsidies, targeting, selectivity and conditionality,
contrasting them with the basic income model. They argue that the
provision of basic incomes not only provides economic security but
has many knock-on effects, allowing families to escape the debt
trap, enrich food consumption and unlock constraints to schooling
and healthcare. Above all it may enable individuals, including
women, the disabled, the elderly and those in excluded castes or
tribes, to engage more effectively in wider society.
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