85414 RIGHT TO WORK? Titles in the Equity and Development Series The Equity and Development Series addresses the distributional con- sequences of macroeconomic policies and showcases techniques for systematically analyzing the distributional consequences of policy reform. Titles in this series undergo internal and external review under the management of the Research Group in the World Bank’s Development Economics Vice Presidency. Right to Work? Assessing India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme in Bihar (2014), by Puja Dutta, Rinku Murgai, Martin Ravallion, and Dominique van de Walle Perspectives on Poverty in India: Stylized Facts from Survey Data (2011), by World Bank Poverty and Social Exclusion in India (2011), by World Bank Gender Aspects of the Trade and Poverty Nexus: A Macro-Micro Approach (2009), edited by Maurizio Bussolo and Rafael E. De Hoyos No Growth without Equity? Inequality, Interests, and Competition in Mexico (2009), edited by Michael Walton and Santiago Levy The Impact of Macroeconomic Policies on Poverty and Income Distribution: Macro-Micro Evaluation Techniques and Tools (2008), edited by Luiz A. Pereira da Silva, François Bourguignon, and Maurizio Bussolo Land in Transition: Reform and Poverty in Rural Vietnam (2008), by Martin Ravallion and Dominique van de Walle The Microeconomics of Income Distribution Dynamics in East Asia and Latin America (2004), edited by Nora Lustig, François Bour- guignon, and Francisco H. G. Ferreira The Impact of Economic Policies on Poverty and Income Distribu- tion: Evaluation Techniques and Tools (2003), edited by Luiz A. Pereira da Silva and François Bourguignon Free access to titles in the Equity and Development Series is available at https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2160 RIGHT TO WORK? Assessing India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme in Bihar Puja Dutta Rinku Murgai Martin Ravallion Dominique van de Walle © 2014 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW, Washington DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1234 17 16 15 14 This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. Note that The World Bank does not necessarily own each component of the content included in the work. The World Bank therefore does not warrant that the use of the content contained in the work will not infringe on the rights of third parties. The risk of claims resulting from such infringement rests solely with you. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent. 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Assessing India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme in Bihar. Washington, DC: World Bank. doi:10.1596/978-1-4648- 0130-3. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 Translations—If you create a translation of this work, please add the following disclaimer along with the attribution: This translation was not created by The World Bank and should not be considered an official World Bank translation. The World Bank shall not be liable for any content or error in this translation. All queries on rights and licenses should be addressed to World Bank Publications, The World Bank Group, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN (paper): 978-1-4648-0130-3 ISBN (electronic): 978-1-4648-0131-0 DOI: 10.1596/978-1-4648-0130-3 Cover design: Debra Naylor, Naylor Design, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Dutta, Puja. Right-to-work? : assessing India’s employment guarantee scheme in Bihar / Puja Dutta, Rinku Murgai, Martin Ravallion, and Dominique van de Walle. pages cm. — (Equity and development) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4648-0130-3 (alk. paper) — ISBN 978-1-4648-0131-0 (electronic) 1. Manpower policy, Rural—India—Bihar. 2. Right to labor—India—Bihar. 3. Guar- anteed annual income—India—Bihar. 4. Unemployment—India—Bihar. I. World Bank. II. Title. HD5710.85.I42B5435 2014 331.01'10954123—dc23 2014001155 Contents Foreword xiii Acknowledgments xvii About the Authors xix Abbreviations xxi Introduction xxiii Overview 1 The Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme 7 This Study 12 Main Lessons from the Study 15 Notes 17 References 19 1 Does India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme Guarantee Employment? 23 Why an Employment Guarantee Need Not Be Attainable 24 Performance in Meeting the Demand for Work across States 30 Targeting 40 Wages and Rationing on MGNREGS 48 Participation by Women 53 Conclusion 56 Notes 59 References 61 2 Unmet Demand for Work on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme 63 The BREGS Survey 63 Performance in Meeting Demand for Work 66 Annex 2A 71 Notes 77 References 77 v vi CONTENTS 3 Who Gets Work? Who Is Left Out? 79 Targeting 82 Determinants of Participation and Rationing 86 Annex 3A 103 Notes 113 References 114 4 Wages 115 Payment of Wages 116 Wages Received by Households 118 Impact of BREGS on Wages 128 Determinants of Wages 133 Comparing Survey Aggregates with Administrative Data 135 Annex 4A 138 Notes 144 References 144 5 Forgone Employment and Income 147 Forgone Opportunities 148 Forgone Income 149 Forgone Employment and Income as a Result of BREGS 150 Impacts on Migration 153 Notes 154 References 154 6 Impacts on Poverty 157 Impacts on Poverty of the Extra Earnings from BREGS 157 Comparisons with Other Simulated Impacts 161 Perceptions of BREGS 168 Annex 6A 171 Notes 173 Reference 174 7 Reforming the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Citizen Awareness 175 Registration and Expressing Demand for Work 175 What Do Rural Households Know about BREGS? 179 A Pilot Information Campaign 194 Annex 7A 214 Notes 216 References 217 CONTENTS vii 8 Reforming the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Administrative Processes 219 A Closer Look at the Scheme’s Administration 220 Understanding the Supply-Side Constraints on Delivery 234 Learning from Experiences Elsewhere 245 Notes 247 References 250 Glossary 253 Index 255 Boxes O.1 Key Features of MGNREGS 3 1.1 Effect of Local-Level Costs on Meeting Demand under MGNREGS 27 1.2 Corruption and the Unmet Demand for Work 29 7.1 Are the Transparency Safeguards Adhered To in Practice? 177 8.1 Informed, Participatory Planning for the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) 224 8.2 The Role of the Mukhiya 236 Figures O.1 Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Flowchart 9 1.1 There Is No Correlation between Participation Rates in MGNREGS and the Incidence of Poverty across Indian States 35 1.2 Demand for MGNREGS Work Is Greater in Poorer States 37 1.3 Poorer States Have Greater Unmet Demand for Work on MGNREGS 37 1.4 There Is Less Rationing at the Margin Than on Average across States 38 1.5 Participation and Rationing by Consumption per Person, Rural India 43 1.6 Targeting Performance Rises with the Overall Participation Rate across States 47 1.7 Participation Rates for Scheduled Tribes, Scheduled Castes, and Other Backward Classes Rise Faster Than That for “Other” Castes as the Overall Participation Rate Increases across States 51 viii CONTENTS 1.8 Women Get a Larger Share of MGNREGS Work Than of Casual Wage Labor across States 54 1.9 The Share of Work Going to Women Tends to Be Lower in Poorer States 55 1.10 The Share of Work Going to Women Tends to Be Lower in States with Higher Rationing 56 3.1 Participation and Rationing as a Function of Wealth 88 4.1 Delays in Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Wage Payments 118 4.2 Wages over Time 121 4.3 Evolution of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Wages and Days Worked over the Entire Survey Period 124 4.4 Density of Daily Casual Wages, by Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Participation Status 126 4.5 Wages Relative to the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Stipulated Wage Rate 131 4.6 Actual BREGS Wages Relative to the BREGS Stipulated Wage Rate, by Gender 133 5.1 Distribution of the Ratio of Self-Assessed Forgone Days to Public Works Days and Ratio of Forgone Wages to Public Works Wages 152 6.1 Impacts on Participants’ Poverty in Round 1 159 6.2 Poverty Impact Graph for Public Works Participants and the Whole Population 160 6.3 Poverty Impact Graph with 50 Percent Lower Forgone Income 162 6.4 Poverty Impact Graph without Forgone Income 163 6.5 Impacts on Poverty under Idealized Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme 165 8.1 Selection of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Works 221 8.2 Worksite Facilities in Round 2 230 8.3 Utilization of Available Resources across Districts 241 Tables O.1 Summary Statistics on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme from Administrative Data 10 1.1 Summary MGNREGS Statistics, 2009/10 33 1.2 Program Expenditure per Capita across States 36 CONTENTS ix 1.3 Coverage of MGNREGS across Consumption Quintiles, 2009/10 42 1.4 Targeting Performance of MGNREGS across States 46 1.5 Participation Rates and Targeting by Social Group 49 1.6 Average Wages on MGNREGS and in Casual Labor, 2009/10 52 1.7 Regression Results for Female Share of Employment in MGNREGS 57 2.1 Sample Sizes in Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Survey 65 2.2 Summary of Participation, Demand, and Rationing 67 2.3 Joint Distribution of Program Participation across the Two Survey Rounds 68 2.4 Days of Employment Provided and Demanded in the Past Year 70 2.5 Household Perceptions about Why They Were Rationed 70 2A.1 Distribution of Households and Individuals across Strata (Round 1) 74 2A.2 Sample Size (Rounds 1 and 2) 75 2A.3 Variable Definitions 76 3.1 Characteristics of Participants, Excess Demanders, and the Rest, Round 1 80 3.2 Coverage of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme across Consumption Quintiles of Rural Bihar 83 3.3 Coverage of the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme across Social Groups of Rural Bihar 85 3.4 Targeting Differentials by Poverty Status and Social Group 86 3.5 Regressions for Household Participation, Demand, and Assignment of Work 90 3.6 Individual-Level Determinants of Days Worked on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme in Round 1 99 3A.1 Participation and Demand for Work by Household Asset Group 103 3A.2 Effects of Gram Panchayat Attributes on Participation by Asset Group 107 3A.3 Individual-Level Participation, Demand, and Assignment of Work 108 4.1 Daily Wage Rate for the Week before Interview 120 x CONTENTS 4.2 Average Wage Rates before and after Increases in the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Stipulated Wage 123 4.3 Daily Wages for Farm and Nonfarm Casual Labor in Bihar from the 2009/10 National Sample Survey, by Subround 125 4.4 Sample Total Person Days of Non–Public Works Work by Operation and Subround, 2009/10 130 4.5 Wages and Employment Comparison between Survey Data and Administrative Data 137 4A.1 The Determinants of BREGS and Non-BREGS Casual Wages at the Individual Level 138 5.1 Forgone Work Opportunities Identified by Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Participants 149 5.2 Forgone Wages for Casual Work Compared with Actual Wages for Those Working in the Same Month 151 5.3 Migration Impact of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme 153 6.1 Summary of Estimated Poverty Impacts Holding Total Public Spending Constant 167 6.2 Summary Statistics on Perception Variables 169 6A.1 Perceptions among Nonparticipants 171 7.1 Not All Households That Want a Job Card Have One 176 7.2 Notion of “Demanding” Work Is Weak but Improving 178 7.3 Summary Statistics of Knowledge of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Rules 180 7.4 Regression for Knowledge of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Rules in Round 1 185 7.5 Estimates of the Effect of the Movie on Knowledge about the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme by Gender 197 7.6 Estimates of the Effect of the Movie on Perceptions and Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Participation by Gender 200 7.7 Effects of the Movie on Learning about the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme 205 7.8 Tests for Heterogeneity in the Impacts of the Movie 208 7A.1 Knowledge among Participants, Excess Demanders, and the Rest 214 8.1 Percentage of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Expenditure by Type of Project, 2008/09 222 CONTENTS xi 8.2 Participant Reports about the Worksite 228 8.3 Time Taken for Payment of Wages after Work Completion 231 8.4 Percentage of Rural Households with Accounts at Financial Institutions 233 8.5 Percentage of Participants Reporting Wage Payments through Various Sources at the Last Worksite 233 8.6 Flow of Funds 238 Foreword India’s Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) is one of the world’s largest experiments in running a public employment generation scheme. The Act to ini- tiate this program was passed by the Indian parliament in 2005, making a certain minimal amount of paid employment a justiciable right of rural Indian households. Soon thereafter, MGNREGS was rolled out in India’s most backward districts, spanning the length and breadth of the nation. During this process MGNREGS was, by turns, praised, criticized, hailed, and castigated, but what was unquestionable and recognized by all was the ambitious scale of the experiment. Not surprisingly, many studies of MGNREGS have been under- taken, from anthropological sketches to village-level statistical, econometric analyses. However, a scientifically controlled, evidence- based, large-scale study of this important program was still needed, especially in regions in which administrative and organizational capacity is not high. This book, by Puja Dutta, Rinku Murgai, Martin Ravallion, and Dominique van de Walle, focuses on Bihar, India’s third largest state, and one of its poorest. The book fills that analytical need and will no doubt be viewed as one of the most comprehensive and dispassionate research monographs on the sub- ject. I expect this book to be of value not just to the government and researchers in India but also to economists the world over and to policy makers in other emerging market economies who want to learn from India’s experience on job creation to inform their fight against extreme poverty. They will learn from MGNREGS’s suc- cesses (the study finds, for instance, that the rationing process is pro- poor and the scheme is reaching poor families) and from its failures (for instance, large leakages, and large unmet demand for work— unmet demand that is not revealed by the administrative data). The study draws on a wide variety of methods, including sub- jective assessments by respondents, observational (econometric) and experimental methods, and qualitative field work. A specially xiii xiv FOREWORD designed panel survey of 3,000 households, representative of all of rural Bihar, was implemented. A distinctive feature of the method- ology was the use of individual-specific counterfactual questions to assess the micro-impacts of the program. This technique allowed the authors to provide a very detailed picture of the impacts of the scheme. What makes this study especially important and topical is that employment is, today, a major concern across the world. Evidence indicates that, worldwide, the aggregate wage-bill-to-GDP ratio is declining. This outcome seems to go hand in hand with a propensity to have fewer jobs and lower wages, which is, of course, a matter of some concern since such a large fraction of the world population lives by wages alone. If this trend persists it will weaken our ability to fight poverty and deprivation, and can become a source of social unrest and political turbulence. It is not surprising that “jobs” is a matter of concern across the world, from the United States and Europe to South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. The problem is exacerbated by the march of technology, which brings more and more workers from far corners of the world into a common labor market. Our focus on labor market policies and the challenges therein is bound to increase. The problem will have to be tackled by many different methods, and one contender in emerging economies is public employment programs. The final word is not out on the role and efficacy of such government-run employment programs. Important questions remain about their fiscal viability, inflationary impact, and effect on the incidence of poverty. The present book does not try to answer all these questions, but focuses on some important ones, especially those pertaining to chronic poverty. The questions it takes on, it answers more fully and comprehensively than any other book or paper that I have read. The book clearly sketches out areas where the program has succeeded and those where it has failed. It also sheds light on the challenges of running such a program in poorer regions where the need for jobs is great but the available organiza- tional capital is low. I hope this book will not just answer important questions, as it does, but will also provide a foundation for asking other ques- tions, especially those relating to the macroeconomic consequences of large-scale public employment programs. I expect the book to enable policy makers, even when they design and operate temporary employment programs to battle famine and other short-term calami- ties, as they have done for centuries, to glean ideas to increase their effectiveness in creating meaningful employment. FOREWORD xv India’s MGNREGS is the largest state-run employment-generation scheme in the world. This book is the most comprehensive study of this scheme. It is natural to expect it to find a large readership with or without my urging, but let me, nevertheless, use this Foreword to put my urging on record. Kaushik Basu Chief Economist and Senior Vice President The World Bank Washington, DC January 2014 Acknowledgments The study has benefited greatly from the support and insights of Santhosh Mathew (former principal secretary, Rural Development Department, government of Bihar) throughout the project. Anup Mukerji (former chief secretary, government of Bihar) gave the ini- tial impetus for the study. At the World Bank, Philip O’Keefe, Man- soora Rashid, Pablo Gottret, and N. Roberto Zagha have shown constant interest and support for this work. We were fortunate to receive excellent research assistance from Arthur Alik-Lagrange, Maria Mini Jos, and Manasa Patnam. The field work for both rounds of the survey was carried out by GfK Mode. Sunai Consultancy Private Ltd., under the able leadership of Khurshid Akhtar, provided critical support on all aspects of the field work related to this study, including piloting of questionnaires, supervision of field work, data entry, qualitative process assess- ments, and rollout of the information intervention using a movie. Juan Muñoz provided guidance on sample design and household tracking for the panel survey. The movie used a trial information campaign that was produced by Praxis with assistance from Sou- mya Kapoor. The qualitative research for this study was undertaken by action research teams from Development Alternatives, Indian Grameen Services, MART, and Sunai Consultancy Pvt. Ltd. We are grateful to the Rural Development Department, government of Bihar, for making available administrative data for this analysis and for providing insights into the challenges and ongoing initiatives in Bihar. Pranav Chaudhury, Anindita Adhikari, and Devesh Sharma provided the data required for the analysis for funds flow and for further information on administrative processes. Funding for this study was received from several sources, includ- ing the Trust Fund for Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development (TFESSD), the Spanish Impact Evaluation Fund (SIEF), and the Gender Action Plan Trust Fund. Funding from the government of the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development is also gratefully acknowledged; however, the views do not necessarily reflect the U.K. government’s official policies. xvii xviii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors are grateful to Jean Drèze, Emanuela Galasso, Markus Goldstein, Pablo Gottret, Ghazala Mansuri, Santhosh Mathew, Giovanna Prennushi, Abhijit Sen, and Theresa Jones for comments on this manuscript or presentations based on it. While the study has benefited from discussions with the Rural Development Department (government of Bihar), the Ministry of Rural Development (govern- ment of India), and the Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance (government of India), the study is neither sponsored by the government of India, nor will the findings be binding on the gov- ernment. Valuable feedback was also received from seminars at the U.K. Department for International Development, the World Bank, and at various conferences and universities. These are the views of the authors and do not necessarily repre- sent those of the World Bank or its member countries. About the Authors Puja Vasudeva Dutta is a senior economist in the World Bank’s East Asia Human Development Unit. She holds a DPhil in econom- ics from the University of Sussex. Dutta has worked primarily on the issues of social protection design, delivery and evaluation, pov- erty and inequality, and labor markets in India, Maldives, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Republic of the Union of Myanmar. Rinku Murgai is a lead economist in the World Bank’s South Asia Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit. She holds a PhD in agricultural and resource economics from the University of California at Berkeley. Murgai has worked on a range of issues in the areas of poverty measurement, impact evaluation of public pro- grams, social protection, and functioning of rural land and water markets. Martin Ravallion holds the inaugural Edmond D. Villani Chair of Economics at Georgetown University. Before taking up this posi- tion in December 2012, he had been director of the World Bank’s Research Department. Ravallion’s main research interests have long concerned poverty and policies for fighting it. He has advised numer- ous governments and international agencies on this topic, and he has written extensively on this and other subjects in economics, includ- ing three books and 200 papers in scholarly journals and edited vol- umes. He currently serves on the editorial boards of 10 economics journals, is a senior fellow of the Bureau for Research in Economic Analysis of Development, a founding council member and president (elect) of the Society for the Study of Economic Inequality, a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research (U.S.), and nonresident fellow of the Center for Global Development, Washing- ton, DC. Among various prizes and awards, in 2012 he was awarded the John Kenneth Galbraith Prize from the American Agricultural and Applied Economics Association. xix xx ABOUT THE AUTHORS Dominique van de Walle is a lead economist in the World Bank’s Development Research Group. She holds a master’s degree in economics from the London School of Economics and a PhD in economics from the Australian National University, and began her career at the Bank as a member of the core team that produced the 1990 World Development Report t on poverty. Van de Walle has spent many years in the Bank’s Research Department, as well as six years in the Gender and Development Group and in Social Protection and Labor. Her research interests are in the general area of poverty, vulnerability, gender and public policy, encompassing social protection, safety nets, and impact evaluation; rural develop- ment, land distribution, rural infrastructure, and poverty; infrastruc- ture (water and electricity); and women’s labor force participation. Much of her recent past research has been on Vietnam, South Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Abbreviations BDO block development officer BPL Below Poverty Line BREGS Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme CBO community-based organization CSO civil society organization CSS centrally sponsored scheme GIS geographic information system GP Gram Panchayat ICT information and communications technology IT information technology km kilometer(s) MGNREGS Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme MIS (MGNREGS) Management Information System MoRD Ministry of Rural Development NGO nongovernmental organization NREGA National Rural Employment Guarantee Act NSS National Sample Survey NSSO National Sample Survey Organization OBC Other Backward Class PO program officer PRI Panchayati Raj Institution PRS panchayat rozgar sewak PW public works R1 round 1 R2 round 2 Rs rupees xxi xxii ABBREVIATIONS SC Scheduled Caste SHG self-help group SoR Schedule of Rates ST Scheduled Tribe Introduction In 2006, India embarked on an ambitious attempt to fight poverty by attempting to introduce a wage floor in a setting in which many unskilled workers earn less than the minimum wage. The 2005 National Rural Employment Guarantee Act creates a justiciable “right to work” by promising 100 days of wage employment in every financial year to all rural households whose adult members volunteer to do unskilled manual work. Work is provided in public works projects at the statutory minimum wage notified for the pro- gram by state governments that are responsible for implementing the Act under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guar- antee Scheme (MGNREGS). Work must be made available within 15 days of receiving an application to work, failing which, the state government is liable for paying an unemployment allowance. MGNREGS is the largest antipoverty public employment pro- gram anywhere. Yet until recently, it has been subject to very little rigorous evaluative research. If the scheme worked in practice the way it is designed, there would be little or no unmet demand for work among unskilled workers. Anyone who wanted work at the stipulated wage rates would get it. Under ideal conditions, such a scheme could almost certainly have a large impact on poverty in India. The work requirement will create a “self-targeting” mecha- nism, in that nonpoor people are unlikely to demand such work. The scheme could also help reduce future poverty through its second- round effects, including providing insurance in risk-prone environ- ments, empowering workers and villagers generally, and creating useful assets. This study asks: Are these ideal conditions met in practice? How much impact on poverty do the earnings from the scheme have? Why might that impact fall short of its potential? How can the scheme bridge that gap? The impacts can be expected to vary across the states of India, as well as within them. The extent of poverty (or its correlates) can be expected to condition the impact. We confirm expectations that the demand for this work tends to be higher in the poorer states. xxiii xxiv INTRODUCTION However, actual participation rates in MGNREGS are not (as a rule) any higher in poorer states. A likely reason for the lower par- ticipation is that poorer states face extra constraints on their ability to implement the scheme effectively. Among the important factors, they face shortages in the types of skilled manpower needed for effective administration of such a complex scheme. A common char- acteristic of poor states and countries is that skilled manpower is scarce, which constrains their ability to absorb funds and implement such schemes. Without reasonably rigorous and professional super- vision and monitoring at the local level, with firm reporting links up the chain of command, and strong overall leadership, one might find that the scheme works less well in poor areas—ironically, the places where it is probably needed most. That is indeed what we find across the states of India: the incidence of unmet demand for work tends to be higher in poorer states, even though demand for the scheme is higher there. On balance, the scheme is no more effective in the states where it is needed the most. Thus, the bulk of this volume tries to provide a better understand- ing of this finding by undertaking a closer study of the performance of MGNREGS in what is by most measures one of India’s poor- est states, Bihar. To address the questions about the scheme, we implemented a panel survey of 3,000 households in the rural areas of Bihar during the months of May and June in 2009 and 2010. In using the results of the survey and administrative data to address the key questions about performance of the scheme in Bihar, we draw on a variety of methods, including subjective assessments by respon- dents, observational (econometric) and experimental methods, and qualitative field work. A distinctive feature of this methodology is the use of individual-specific counterfactual questions in assessing the microimpacts of the program. This methodology allows us to provide a very detailed picture of the impacts of the scheme. The results confirm the potential for the labor earnings from this scheme to reduce poverty in Bihar, but also point to a number of spe- cific performance issues that impede realization of that potential in practice. We find that there is large unmet demand for work on the scheme—unmet demand that is not revealed by the administrative data. However, we also find that the rationing process is pro-poor and the scheme is reaching poor families, though richer households also share in the gains. Among those who do participate, we also find a sizable gap between the wages actually reported by workers and those they are supposed to receive under the scheme. A similar gap is revealed by administrative records on wage disbursements. The gap is nowhere near as large as some casual observers have claimed; grossing up our INTRODUCTION xxv representative sample estimates to the state as a whole, we find that one-fifth of the claimed wage payments are unaccounted for. Leak- age is the likely explanation for the discrepancy between the survey results and the administrative data. So workers are not getting all the work they want, and they are not getting the full wages to which they are due. Unsurprisingly, we find that their participation in the scheme is far from costless to them. Many participants report that they had to give up another income-earning activity when they took up work on the scheme. These factors have greatly reduced the scheme’s impact on pov- erty. Whereas we estimate that under ideal conditions the extra labor earnings from the scheme would bring down the poverty rate in Bihar 14 percentage points or more, in actuality the impact is closer to 1 percentage point. We find that more than two-thirds—about 10 percentage points—of “lost impact” is attributable to the ways in which the scheme is not fulfilling the provisions of the Act. In par- ticular, if there were no rationing (so that anyone who wanted work got work), the impact of the scheme on poverty would be 8 percent- age points. The gap between actual wages received and stipulated wages accounts for 2 percent of the gap. The rest is due to forgone income, which is hard to avoid. Thus, unmet demand for work is the single most important policy-relevant factor in accounting for this gap between actual performance and the scheme’s potential. In probing the factors underlying this performance gap, we find very low public awareness of what needs to be done to obtain work and low participation by poor people in decisions about the scheme. Knowledge is lower for women than for men, and higher for those who are better educated. The sharing of information between men and women within the household appears to be weak. There are also strong village effects on knowledge about the scheme. Holding con- stant individual and household characteristics, levels of awareness of the scheme are lower in villages with higher inequality and where there are more signs of tension between different social groups. The characteristics of the village leader (such as whether he or she lives in the village) also matter. We use a randomized control trial of an awareness intervention— a specially designed fictional movie—to show how knowledge of rights and processes can be enhanced as a key step toward better performance. The main story line centered on a temporary migrant worker returning to his village to see his wife and young daughter. He learns that there is work available in the village, even though it is the lean season, so he can stay there. The movie was effective in raising awareness, but had little discernible effect on actions such as seeking employment when needed. xxvi INTRODUCTION A number of specific supply-side constraints to work provision are also identified, including poor implementation capacity and weak financial management and monitoring systems. The resultant bottlenecks in the funds flow and planning and work sanctioning processes indicate that the implementation of the scheme differs sig- nificantly from the intent. We find evidence of unpredictability of work provision, delays in wage payments, and deviations from the scheme guidelines in the management of worksites and provision of facilities to workers. These factors both discourage participation and lead to the creation of poor-quality assets, thereby reducing the overall impact on poverty. We argue that if the potential impact of MGNREGS is to be realized, eliminating the extensive unmet demand for work under the scheme is crucial—to make it a genuine “employment guaran- tee.” The extent of unmet demand we demonstrate in poor states, including Bihar, is undermining the ability of the scheme to reach those in need, and also greatly reducing the insurance and empower- ment benefits of the scheme, making it less likely that women will be reached by the scheme, creating opportunities for leakage, and vastly decreasing the overall impact on poverty. Addressing this problem will require coordinated action on two fronts. First, enhanced central and local administrative capacities for implementation and monitoring are needed. Second, far greater public awareness of the obligations, rights, and rules of the scheme, more active public mobilization, and better mechanisms for address- ing grievances are required. These two sets of reforms are comple- ments; doing one without the other may have little impact. Overview Fighting poverty in poorer places may be hard for many reasons. Credit market failures may be more severe, leaving many more unexploited investment opportunities than in better-off economies, leading to lower long-term growth rates and less poverty reduction. Poor nutrition and health (especially in the early years of life) can have the same consequences. The various dimensions of inequality that often accompany high poverty may limit the scope for coopera- tive action to fight poverty. Thus, poverty can self-perpetuate. Poverty can persist for another potentially important reason: poorer places tend to have weaker public administrations. Employees with the skills to implement and monitor public programs, includ- ing programs for fighting poverty, are relatively scarce in poorer economies. Even when governments care about reducing poverty today, they can face trade-offs with other demands on their budgets and staff resources that also have a bearing on future poverty. No doubt other factors come into play to influence the terms of this trade-off, such as strong political will to fight poverty, but a trade- off can still be expected. In attempting to fight poverty in poor places with weak administra- tive capabilities, the idea of “rights” has often been invoked. Although rights-based ideas about distributive justice have a long history (back to the 18th century), they have not had great traction in development policy discussions until recently. We have seen calls for the “right to health care,” “right to schooling,” “right to food,” and “right to work.” Because poor people tend to have few rights, it is hoped that creating new rights will empower them to take actions that will help them escape poverty. Whether this tactic will work is another matter. The same factors that made people poor in the first place may operate to undermine attempts to expand their effective rights. This book aims to contribute to the understanding of the efficacy of poor states in fighting poverty using an ambitious rights-based program—the largest antipoverty public employment program in India, and possibly anywhere in the world. We study how that program works in one of India’s poorest states—where one would 1 2 RIGHT TO WORK? hope that such a scheme would work well. Some comparisons are also made with other, less poor Indian states. The program we study is India’s Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), which was launched to implement the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (here the Act for short; the abbreviation NREGA is common in India). The Act was passed by the Indian Parliament in September 2005. It created a justiciable right to work for all households in rural India by promising 100 days of work per financial year to all rural households whose adults are willing to do unskilled manual labor at the statutory wage established for the program. Work is to be made available to anyone who demands it within 15 days of receipt of an application, failing which the applicant is entitled to an unem- ployment allowance. The work is supposed to be undertaken with a view to creating sustainable assets in rural villages to promote future livelihoods. In addition, the scheme’s delivery processes, par- ticularly the stress placed on community participation, transpar- ency, and accountability, are designed to strengthen village-level governance. MGNREGS is a prominent example of a class of direct inter- ventions against poverty, also called workfare or public works programs, that impose work requirements on participants. Such programs have desirable incentive effects as second-best policies for situations in which the set of feasible redistributive policy instru- ments is limited.1 It is also known that, under certain conditions, these programs can yield efficiency gains, given the existence of factor-market distortions (see, for example, Ravallion 1990; and Basu, Chau, and Kanbur 2009). The program became operational in February 2006. In the first phase, MGNREGS operated in the country’s 200 most backward districts and was expanded to an additional 130 districts in 2007.2 The remaining districts in the country were eligible under the Act beginning April 1, 2008. Since 2008, the program has reached the entire country with the exception of districts with entirely urban populations. A description of the key features of MGNREGS is provided in box O.1. India has long experience with using rural public works to implement antipoverty and famine-relief policies.3 However, sev- eral aspects of MGNREGS distinguish it from earlier public works programs: • MGNREGS recognizes the right to work as a legal right. The state government is legally bound to provide employment to a household within 15 days of its demanding work or to pay the OVERVIEW 3 Box O.1 Key Features of MGNREGS Each rural household guaranteed 100 days of work per year upon demand. Each rural household is entitled to a free job card with pho- tographs of all adult members living in the household. Adult members of these registered households with job cards may then apply for employment, and the government is obligated to provide the work within 15 days, failing which the applicant is entitled to an unemploy- ment allowance. Furthermore, work must be provided within 5 kilometers of the applicant’s residence or there is a 10 percent premium on the scheme’s wage. How the household distributes the 100 days among its members is entirely the household’s decision. All-India uniform wage of 100 rupees (Rs) per day established in the scheme, but adjusted for state-specific inflation. In 2009, the central government uncoupled MGNREGS wages from state-level statutory minimum wage rates.a Payment is made according to a Schedule of Rates that is based on the amount of work done by a person. The Act requires the Schedule of Rates to be set such that an able-bodied worker working for nine hours, with one hour of rest, is able to earn the established program minimum wage. Wages paid directly into post office or bank accounts. Beginning April 1, 2008, all MGNREGS wages began to be paid directly into workers’ bank or post office accounts (opened free of charge). Exceptions are made if a state government acquires an exemption from the central government. Wages should be paid no later than a fortnight after work completion. Provision of basic facilities at the worksite. Basic facilities include shade, drinking water, child care for children under age six, first aid facilities to attend to the injured in case of an accident, and a notice board with all relevant information about the worksite. Several provisions of the Act encourage the participation of women. First, the Act mandates that one-third of the workers be women. Second, it ensures equal wages for men and women, with gender-specific productivity norms in the Schedule of Rates. Finally, the scheme mandates provision of work locally (within 5 kilometers of one’s residence) and child care facilities (if more than five children younger than age six are present at a worksite). Focus on labor-intensive rural development works, with a heavy focus on water and irrigation activities as well as connectivity. In addition to the list of specific types of works allowed under the Act, additional types of works may be acceptable based on consultations between the state and the central governments. Overall, the scheme maintains a 60:40 labor-to-capital ratio. Use of contractors or machinery in the execution of works is banned. (Continued on the following page) 4 RIGHT TO WORK? Box O.1 (Continued) Local village governments ( referred to as Panchayati Raj Institutions [PRI ]) and communities play a central role. PRI leaders and communities are meant to identify the list of works through dis- cussions in village meetings (Gram Sabha). PRIs also participate in the execution (at least 50 percent of works by value are to be imple- mented through the Gram Panchayat), supervision, and monitoring of works (including through social audits). A dedicated administrative structure for MGNREGS implemen- tation. The Act makes specific provision for administrative costs to be borne by the center and supplemented by states. There is provision for a dedicated cadre of MGNREGS officials and functionaries at the district, block, and Gram Panchayat levels that are responsible for implementing the program. Emphasis on accountability through the use of information and communication technology tools and by relying on communities and third-party monitoring. Management information systems have been developed based on administrative reporting of employment generated and assets created. Field-based monitoring is carried out through the Ministry of Rural Development’s national field-level monitors and local Village Vigilance and Monitoring Committees. Community-based mon- itoring through social audits is also occurring in some states. Center and state financing. The central government share amounts to 90 percent of total expenditure on the program. This share includes 100 percent of wage costs and 75 percent of the nonwage component (including materials and wage payments to skilled and semiskilled workers, and most administrative tasks, subject to a maximum limit), working under an assumed 60:40 labor-to-capital ratio. States are responsible for paying 100 percent of unemployment allowance costs. Source: World Bank 2011, based on MGNREGS operational guidelines (www.nrega.nic.in) and various government orders. a. Wage determination rules may change further because setting MGNREGS wages below the state-mandated minimum wage rates under the Minimum Wages Act has been challenged in court as a violation of the law and tanta- mount to “forced labor.” This stand was upheld in September 2011 by a Karnataka High Court verdict that affirms that the central government is obli- gated to pay wages in line with the state minimum wage rate. In January 2012, the Supreme Court refused to stay the Karnataka High Court verdict. unemployment allowance. The scheme is universal in that all rural households can apply for work. In this, the MGNREGS follows a demand-driven, rights-based approach that differs from the supply- based approaches adopted by most earlier public works schemes. It is closest in spirit to the Maharashtra Employment Guarantee Scheme (MEGS) initiated in the 1970s.4 OVERVIEW 5 • Wage payments under MGNREGS are entirely in cash, unlike previous programs that also had food components. • MGNREGS is the first social protection scheme to devolve significant resources to Gram Panchayats (GPs) and under which Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) are given a central role in plan- ning, execution, and oversight.5 In practice, the leader of the GP— called the Mukhiya in Bihar—plays an important role in how the Act is implemented. • The design of MGNREGS emphasizes transparency and accountability to a greater degree than previous schemes. Advocates of this scheme have claimed that it could largely elimi- nate poverty in rural India. For example, Drèze (2004) claims that the scheme “would enable most poor households in rural India to cross the poverty line.” That might appear to be a tall order, but there can be no denying that this is an ambitious and well- intentioned effort to fight poverty in India and that, in principle, it has tremendous promise. Such a workfare scheme tries to reduce poverty in a number of distinct ways. The most direct and obvious way is by providing extra employment and income to the poorest in rural areas. The long- standing incentive argument is that the work requirements in such a scheme mean that it will be self-targeting, that is, the nonpoor will not want to do such work, and poor people will readily turn away from the scheme when better opportunities arise. Furthermore, by linking the wage rate to the statutory minimum wage rate, and guaranteeing work at that wage rate, the scheme becomes a means of enforcing that minimum wage rate on all l casual work, including work not covered by the scheme. Indeed, the exis- tence of such a program can radically alter the bargaining power of poor men and women in the labor market, and also of poor people living in not-so-poor families, by increasing the reservation wage (the fallback position if a bargain is not struck). They may then benefit even if they do not participate (Dasgupta 1993). Such second-round effects may be huge. Murgai and Ravallion (2005b) show that before the program started (based on the 2004/05 National Sample Survey [NSS] round), three-quarters of India’s casual laborers were paid less than the country’s state-level statu- tory minimum wage rates. The 2009/10 NSS round indicates that two-thirds of agricultural labor days were paid less than the mini- mum wage for agricultural unskilled labor. Probably the only way to enforce a living wage in a developing rural economy is for the government to act as the employer of last resort. The spillover effect on nonparticipants could account for a large share of the poverty 6 RIGHT TO WORK? impact of such a scheme, as shown by Murgai and Ravallion (2005a, 2005b). The scheme also tries to address some of the underlying causes of poverty in rural India. It can help reduce future poverty by creating useful assets. For example, it can help regenerate the natural resource base and expand rural connectivity through road rehabilitation. The guarantee of work can provide valuable insurance against the many risks faced by India’s rural poor in their daily lives and help underpin otherwise risky investments. Even those who do not nor- mally need such work can benefit from knowing it is available. The gains to the poor can also be accompanied by efficiency gains given existing labor market distortions.6 Also, by its bottom-up, demand- driven nature, the scheme aims to empower marginalized communi- ties. It would be naive to think that self-efficacy in demanding work will emerge overnight among poor people. However, creating the legal right is certainly a first, positive step. The idea of an employment guarantee is important to the realization of these benefits. The gains depend heavily on the scheme’s ability to originate a supply of work to match the demand. Doing so is not going to be easy, given that it requires an open-ended pub- lic spending commitment; similarly to an insurance company, the government must pay up when shocks hit. This kind of uncertainty about disbursements in risky environments would be a challenge for any government at any level of economic development. Even if flex- ibility in spending is not an issue, accommodating supply to demand will require state and local government administrative capabilities that could be a challenge, particularly in poor areas. If creating a right to work is not in the interests of those in power locally, and public capabilities for enforcement are weak, rationing can emerge at the local level even when the central government is committed to providing funds. Along with financial resources and government capacity to imple- ment, public awareness is also essential for success. Interest in the use of information-based interventions to improve service delivery and governance has increased recently. The premise is that lack of information is a decisive demand-side factor inhibiting successful participatory action by poor people to get the services to which they are entitled. Past studies lend support to this premise.7 However, incomplete information is only one of the reasons that poor people do not access the services due to them.8 Imparting information about the available services does not necessarily make that information relevant and meaningful in their daily lives. People might not know their legal rights because there is no point to knowing them when the reality of their lives will never admit those rights. Greater knowledge OVERVIEW 7 will not then be sufficient for people to be willing and able to take action to get what they are due. The same factors that make poverty and underdevelopment persist may also make information about one’s legal rights largely irrelevant to one’s agency in accessing services. The word “public” in “public awareness” is key. Specific individuals may know that they were denied work, but may not be aware that this is true of others as well. Local officials can exploit a degree of “plausible deniability” of large-scale rationing of work, as long as it is not too obvious. Supporters of MGNREGS have argued for active monitoring through social audits and local public disclosure of payments (see, for example, Drèze 2004). The little quantitative evidence available on the performance of Gram Sabhas (GS) suggests that when the GS is held it does improve the performance of public programs in reaching the poor in southern states (Besley, Pande, and Rao 2005).9 However, generalizing from this evidence to the rest of India would clearly be hazardous; some states, including Bihar, have weak PRIs, which have a critical role in MGNREGS implementation.10 At the same time, the experience of civil-society-led social audits across the country (particularly in Rajasthan) shows that mobilization of village communities is possible. However, making social audits a regular public scrutiny process in the absence of strong local community organizations is a challenge. Andhra Pradesh is one example in which the state government has developed an institutional mechanism for under- taking audits of all MGNREGS works across the state (Aiyar, Kapoor Mehta, and Samji 2011; Aiyar and Samji 2009; Aakella and Kidambi 2007). The Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Bihar is the third largest, poorest, and most densely populated state in India. With a population of 104 million, which is 8.6 percent of India’s total, it is the largest state after Uttar Pradesh and Maha- rashtra. Population density is very high and nearly four times the national average. One in six poor Indians lives in Bihar. In 2009/10, more than half (55 percent) of the rural population lived below the poverty line.11 Because of population growth, between 2004/05 and 2009/10, the number of rural poor people increased to 50 million from 45.4 million. Poverty rates have remained persistently high.12 The state has had one of the lowest long-run trend rates of poverty reduction in India; indeed, there is virtually no long-run trend reduc- tion for the period 1960–2000 (Datt and Ravallion 2002). 8 RIGHT TO WORK? Bihar is predominantly a rural state. The average level of urban- ization in India is low, but at 11.3 percent it is even lower in Bihar (about one-third of India’s average). Changes in the structure of the economy are proceeding rapidly. During the past decade, agricul- ture’s share in total output has fallen from 30.6 percent (in 2001–03) to 18.2 percent (in 2009–11). However, the drop in output has come at a time when the agricultural workforce has declined very slowly, leading to stagnant household incomes from farming. The state has one of the highest levels of rural landlessness and fragmented land holdings in the country. Because of its topographic and climatic con- ditions, Bihar is also vulnerable to natural disasters (for example, droughts in the region south of the Ganges). About 73 percent of the state’s geographical area is flood prone, particularly in the north. Bihar accounts for 17 percent of the flood-prone area and 22 percent of the flood-affected population in India.13 For these reasons, MGNREGS should have great significance to Bihar. The government of Bihar launched the program in 22 districts in February 2006 with central government funding.14 Simultaneously, it launched the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) in the remaining 16 districts with state government funding. The two schemes followed a common set of guidelines and processes, so in effect the scheme started in all districts in 2006 albeit with different sources of funding. In the second phase, beginning April 1, 2007, central government financing was extended to all districts. This study refers to the whole scheme in Bihar as BREGS. The formal processes followed by BREGS closely follow the Act, as figure O.1 illustrates. The starting point is when the household obtains a job card, which forms the basis of identification for demanding employment. Job card holders can make an applica- tion seeking work to the GP or block office, stating the time and duration for which work is sought. Applicants are issued a dated receipt against which the guarantee of providing employment within 15 days operates. On the supply side, open assemblies of the GS are intended to identify suitable projects. The expressed demand for work is then to be accommodated on those projects emerging from the GS that obtain administrative and technical clearances.15 Failing this, the worker is entitled under the Act to an unemploy- ment allowance. The scale of the program is unprecedented for Bihar. Expenditure on public works increased nearly four times from Rs 7,183 million in 2006/07 to Rs 26,320 million in 2010/11 (table O.1). By 2010/11, about 13 million households—more than three-quarters of rural households—were registered for the program, that is, they had been issued job cards (table O.1). Administrative data OVERVIEW 9 Figure O.1 Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Flowchart Demand for Supply of Household applies s Gram Sabha: work h for job card (with work participatory photo of all adult t planning ho usehold hous members) ehold member works for wo rks in GP Shelf of works forr Panchayat rozgar GP prepared for s sewak (PRS) issues entire year (≥ 50 job card to percent to be ho usehol hous d ehold i pl im lemented b GP) d by G Household membe er Household membe er Technical and unaware or aware and interested e administrative uninterested in in BREGS: appliess sanction obtained d BREGS: does not for work subs for s et of wo ubset rks works d demand d workk Work execution: k Does not get work: Gets work: on worksite opened unemployment worksite within 5 km of allowance village (by PRS) Work completion n and measurement t (by JE or PTA), calc wage ca ulation lculatio n Wage payments (through householdd k post office or bank accounts) Source: Based on government of Bihar guidelines available at http://rdd.bih.nic.in/. Note: GP = Gram Panchayat; JE = junior engineer; km = kilometers; PTA = panchayat technical assistant; PRS = panchayat rozgar sewak. indicate that 4.7 million households—nearly 30 percent of rural households—were provided employment, amounting to approxi- mately 160 million person days. Of this, nearly half was performed by Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (SC/ST) workers and nearly 30 percent by women.16 These figures suggest significant expansion relative to previous public works programs in Bihar. For instance, previous programs generated only about 62 million person days in 2005/06, just before the introduction of BREGS. Although about half of this employment was provided to SC/ST households, only about 21 percent was provided to women. 10 Table O.1 Summary Statistics on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme from Administrative Data 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 Allocation and expenditure Total available funds (Rs, millions) 12,289 14,729 21,433 23,967 31,938 Total expenditure (Rs, millions) 7,183 10,534 13,058 18,177 26,320 Total wage expenditures (Rs, millions) 4,222 6,806 8,396 11,087 15,961 Expenditures per household (Rs) 442 638 779 1,069 1,526 Utilization of funds (percent) 58 72 61 76 82 Registration Households issued job cards (millions) 3.6 8.1 10.3 12.4 13.0 Rural households with job cards (percent) 23 52 65 77 80 SC/ST households issued job cards (millions) 1.6 3.8 4.8 5.5 5.7 Households provided employment Households provided employment (millions) 1.7 3.9 3.8 4.1 4.7 Households provided 100 or more days of employment (millions) 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.3 Rural households provided employment (percent) 11 25 24 26 29 Rural households provided 100 or more days of employment (percent) 0.2 0.3 0.6 1.8 1.6 Employment provided Person days generated (millions) 60 84 99 114 160 Person days generated for SC/ST (millions) 30 41 52 54 76 Person days generated for women (millions) — — 30 34 45 Person days per household provided employment 35 22 26 28 34 Person days per rural household 4 5 6 7 10 Person days among SC/ST (percent) 50 49 53 47 47 Person days among women (percent) — — 30 30 28 Sources: Program expenditure (all years) and program outcomes (2006/07, 2007/08): Monthly Progress Report, Rural Development Department, government of Bihar. Data on annual projected population from government of India (2006). Note: The number of rural households was computed by dividing the population projections by the mean rural household size computed from the 2009/10 National Sample Survey (NSS 66th round, Schedule 1.0). Rs = rupees; SC/ST = Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe; — = not available. 11 12 RIGHT TO WORK? This Study This study shows that BREGS has the potential to substantially reduce poverty in Bihar. If every rural household that indicates they want this work were to get the full 100 days at the stipulated wage rate, and did not have to give up any other source of income to take up this work, the poverty rate in rural Bihar would have been 37.6 percent in 2009—12 percentage points lower than the 50 percent rate obtained by using median household consumption per capita as the poverty line, or a 14 percentage point impact compared with the estimated poverty rate in the absence of the program. Therefore, an idealized version of BREGS has the potential to achieve a sizable reduction in poverty in one of India’s poorest states. But that potential is a long way from being met in practice. The estimates suggest that BREGS reduced poverty in 2009 by 1 percentage point. To inform policy discussions about how to ensure greater future impact, we need to understand why the scheme is falling so far short of its potential. There are a number of ways that an ambitious anti- poverty intervention such as this might not realize its potential in practice: • The work requirements may deter some of the poorest, who may not be fit for such work as the result of undernourishment or disability, or poor health generally. • The process of actually applying for work may also discourage some poor people, notably those who have faced a history of social exclusion and marginalization that has led to limited self-efficacy in expressing their demand for any form of public entitlement. • There may be unmet demand for work, in that not everyone who wants work can get it, or some get fewer days of work than they want. Inadequate funds, restrictions on the flow of funds, or limited administrative capacity for implementation at the local level can result in less work being available on the scheme than is demanded, leading to rationing of the work. • The full wage rate stipulated under the scheme might not be received by workers because of leakage. • There is also likely to be forgone income, that is, some opportu- nity cost to the worker from some forgone economic activity; these costs are largely unavoidable “deadweight losses.” • The selection process for projects may be captured by local elites, and not reflect the needs of poor people. To try to shed light on the overall impact and the importance of these various factors, we rely on a wide range of sources: OVERVIEW 13 administrative data, household surveys, a randomized intervention, and qualitative observations from field work. Administrative data sources are known to be questionable in some respects, notably in assessing demand for work on the scheme (Drèze and Oldiges 2011). For that purpose, household surveys are clearly better instruments. In fact, very little systematic information about demand for work is currently available. This book presents survey-based estimates for India as a whole as well as results for Bihar. Results for India are based on the 2009/10 National Sample Survey (Schedule 10.0). The bulk of the analysis on Bihar draws on a panel survey of rural households commissioned by the authors for the purpose of this study (referred to as the BREGS survey). Two surveys were carried out in 2009 and 2010 and spanned 150 villages spread across all 38 districts in Bihar. These data are supplemented by qualitative research in six districts to better understand supply-side challenges. This study is not a standard “impact evaluation” in which average outcomes for those who participate in a program (some- times randomly assigned to it, sometimes not) are compared with outcomes for those who do not participate. We cannot observe any areas of Bihar in which the program was not in effect because Bihar fully scaled up almost immediately, rather than phasing the program into operation as occurred elsewhere in India.17 We need a different approach that still respects the principle of evaluation, namely, that impact is assessed relative to explicit counterfactuals. A distinctive feature of our methodology is that we identify the key counterfactual outcomes of interest—that is, what BREGS participants would have done in the absence of the program—by directly asking individual BREGS participants.18 The advantage of this approach is that it produces an individual-specific estimate of impact—exploiting the information available for each participant—rather than delivering only a mean impact. Thus, it is well suited to distributional analysis. Its disadvantage is that it requires that a counterfactual question be asked, which is never easy (although not fundamentally different from the common method of asking about expectations of the future). A potential shortcoming of this methodology is that counterfac- tual outcomes reported by households do not provide a valid esti- mate of mean impact on the treated for an employment guarantee scheme such as MGNREGS if f the guarantee is being implemented. As Ravallion (1990) argues, the gains from such a program are very likely to spill over into the private labor market. If the employment guarantee is effective, the scheme will establish a firm lower bound to the entire wage distribution—assuming that no able-bodied worker would accept any work, including in the private sector, at a 14 RIGHT TO WORK? wage rate below the public works wage. In such a case, one will incorrectly conclude that the scheme has no impact, because even the counterfactual wages will be the same for participants and non- participants. That would entirely miss the impact, which could be large for both groups.19 However, as we show later in this book, although we cannot rule out the possibility that the scheme is caus- ing a tightening of the agricultural labor market, the extent of the unmet demand for BREGS work does make one skeptical. Another potential shortcoming of the analysis is that we follow the standard practice in India of using household consumption per person as the welfare indicator when measuring poverty and assess- ing performance in targeting the poor. However, this practice does not allow for the likely disutility of doing casual manual wage labor. This type of work (including working on MGNREGS) is physically taxing, of uncertain duration, and provides no employment benefits. Yet the consumption-based measures of welfare used for measuring poverty and assessing targeting performance in India attach no disu- tility to doing such work. Two people with the same real consump- tion expenditure are deemed to be equally poor regardless of how each derives that consumption. We first examine participation in MGNREGS across states using the 2009/10 National Sample Survey (Schedule 10.0). Chapter 1 uses these data to document a substantial degree of unmet demand (“rationing”) in the scheme across states. The chapter identifies likely reasons for rationing, including that state governments also care about the cost of providing employment under MGNREGS. These costs comprise identifying, hiring, training, and supervising the skilled manpower needed for organizing and supervising proj- ects as well as establishing adequate systems for ensuring smooth flow of funds to local implementing agencies and for monitoring scheme performance. A state government may value the objectives of the Act, but it still faces a trade-off between guaranteeing employ- ment to all who want it (as stipulated by the Act) and the costs of doing so.20 Alarmingly, we find that the degree of rationing is greatest in the poorer states that arguably need the scheme more. By and large, MGNREGS is working best where it is needed least. As chapter 1 also shows, Bihar stands out as having not only the highest extent of rationing, but also above-average rationing given its level of poverty. The rest of the volume analyzes why the scheme seems to be working worst in one of the very poorest states. In chapter 2 we use the BREGS survey to look at the demand for work and how much of that demand is actually being met. We demonstrate that the unmet demand for work on the scheme in OVERVIEW 15 Bihar is large. We also show considerable churning in the form of exits and entries into the scheme, and argue that this churning was largely involuntary in that many more households than did so would have liked to enter as well as remain employed in the scheme over time. We turn in chapter 3 to the task of providing a profile of people attracted to the program, and of these, who gets work. Chapter 4 examines the wages received, and we demonstrate that there is a sizable gap between the wages reported by workers in the survey and the stipulated wages for the scheme as well as wages for other casual work. There is a similar gap with the wages recorded in the adminis- trative data. We also explore the differences in wages between men and women and how wages are determined in the scheme versus in the casual labor market. Chapter 5 uses the survey responses to assess likely forgone incomes from BREGS participation. By combining the main elements in these chapters, we are able in chapter 6 to assess how closely BREGS is able to approximate the potential impact on poverty. Instead of a 14 percentage point reduction in poverty as would be expected under ideal conditions— though (we would contend) not unlike the conditions envisaged by the scheme’s designers—we estimate that BREGS has reduced poverty by about 1 percentage point. We then turn to the task of trying to explain why the actual performance of BREGS in reducing poverty falls so far short of poten- tial, and suggest specific actionable areas for reform. Both demand- and supply-side factors constrain participation. Chapter 7 describes the impact on awareness of a randomized awareness intervention using a specially designed fictional movie about BREGS rights and entitlements. Finally, chapter 8 provides insights into supply-side constraints to work provision. Main Lessons from the Study India cannot claim success for its MGNREGS unless the scheme is working adequately where it is needed most, that is, in the country’s poorest areas. This study investigates the scheme’s performance in what is by some measures the country’s poorest state, Bihar, and provides comparisons with other states. Under the idealized conditions that the scheme’s founders appear to have had in mind, everyone who wants work at the stipulated minimum wage rates should get it, up to 100 days per household per year, without having to give up any other income source to take up the work. We show that BREGS should then have a large impact on rural poverty in Bihar, bringing the poverty rate down by some 16 RIGHT TO WORK? 14 percentage points. If anything, this is likely to be an underesti- mate given that it ignores likely spillover effects to casual wage rates for other unskilled work; it also ignores consumption gains from the extra assets created. However, the reality falls far short of this ideal. We estimate that the actual impact is about 1 percentage point. When we use the survey data to understand this clearly disap- pointing performance we learn a lot about how the scheme might work better. Even though public awareness of the existence of the scheme is growing, we find that there is little understanding of even its most basic features. Few people understand that after getting a job card, they need to apply for work to get employment. In that sense, the fundamental principle of employment on demand has yet to sink in. Similarly, knowledge of other entitlements, such as the statutory wage, employment within 15 days, weekly wage pay- ments, unemployment allowances, and facilities to be provided at the worksite, is minimal. We find compelling evidence that the scheme is reaching relatively poor families. Certain types of households are rationed, in that they want this work but do not get it. The rationing exhibits a clear gender dimension—households with large shares of adult women and female-headed households will not get the work they want. In general, the rationing process tends to favor those with characteristics associated with poor households: among richer households, those who have Below-Poverty-Line cards are less likely to be rationed. Those who lack the typical profile of the poor appear to be more likely to be excluded from access to the scheme when they want it. This is evident in the effects of education and landholding on participation in the scheme, given other controls (including wealth). Among those who do participate, we also find a sizable gap between the wages actually reported by workers and the wages they are supposed to receive under the scheme. So workers are not getting all the work they want, and they are not getting the full wages to which they are due. In addition, leakage to unintended beneficiaries (estimated as the gap between survey-based estimates and adminis- trative records on wage disbursements) is substantial even though it is nowhere near as large as some casual observers have claimed or in comparison with that in other antipoverty programs. If the potential gains to India’s poor are to be realized by MGNREGS, policy makers will need to focus on the substan- tial unmet demand for work. Given the scheme’s current level of complexity, meeting this unmet demand will probably not be pos- sible unless administrative capacity for implementing the scheme is strengthened. Better performance will require better state- and OVERVIEW 17 local-level administration, monitoring, and reporting. The short- age of the skilled manpower needed for these tasks clearly con- strains the state’s ability to absorb funds and implement the scheme. Developing local administrative capabilities through training and providing incentives to staff and setting up strong financial management and monitoring systems are high priorities. In particular, initiatives such as creating a state-level corpus fund and putting in place a centralized fund management system can smooth fund flows, thereby limiting one potential source of work rationing. These enhanced administrative capabilities can also be used to ensure local public knowledge of households’ rights and of the scheme’s rules and local monitoring and grievance redress, and to facilitate better administrative response to demands for work. The essential aim is to radically change the entire calculus of costs and benefits facing local leaders and officials. If workers know and are confident that they can demand work at the stipulated wage, they will resist any attempts by officials to deny them or to take a cut from their wages. We have demonstrated that a public information campaign using a movie can significantly enhance workers’ knowl- edge. However, it has little discernible average impact on actions such as seeking employment when needed or on the key scheme outcomes of wages and employment. Among selected subgroups, the only exception to the latter finding is that the movie helped illiter- ate people secure extra work on existing BREGS projects. If such a campaign can be combined with more effective implementation of the scheme’s supply-side provisions and a more rapid flow of funds, it should be possible to realize a greater share of the potential impact on poverty of this ambitious scheme. It is important that reform efforts for MGNREGS work on both of these aspects—a stronger, more capable, local administration, plus more effective participation by civil society. One without the other will not ensure a true “right to work.” Notes 1. For further discussion, see Ravallion (1991) and Besley and Coate (1992). 2. During the first two phases, districts that were not covered by MGNREGS continued to be covered by previous public works programs (that is, the Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana and the National Food for Work Program). 3. See the discussions in Drèze (1990) and World Bank (2011). 18 RIGHT TO WORK? 4. On this scheme see the discussions in Echeverri-Gent (1988), Drèze and Sen (1989), and Ravallion, Datt, and Chaudhuri (1993). 5. The GP is a cluster of villages and is the primary unit of the three-tier structure of local self-governance in rural India. The next higher level of administration is the block, followed by the district. Locally elected bodies at the GP, block, and district levels are referred to as the PRIs. The 73rd Amendment (1992) to the Indian Constitution mandated the devolution of powers and responsibilities to PRIs. 6. The distortions could be caused by monopsony power in rural labor markets (Basu, Chau, and Kanbur 2009) or labor-tying (Basu 2013). Nor does the distortion need to be felt only in the rural labor market; it could instead be manifested in the urban labor market by generating excess migra- tion to urban areas (Ravallion 1990). 7. Strömberg (2004) reports evidence that U.S. antipoverty programs have worked better in places with greater access to radios. For India, Besley and Burgess (2003) find that the governments of states in which newspaper circulation is greater are more responsive in their relief efforts for negative agricultural shocks. In Uganda, Reinikka and Svensson (2005) find significant impacts on schooling of a newspaper campaign. Access to a televised soap opera in Brazil is found by La Ferrara, Chong, and Duryea (2012) to lower fertility, especially among poor women. Jensen and Oster (2009) find that access to television led to less domestic violence and lower fertility rates in India. Not all studies have been supportive. Results of Banerjee and others (2010) are less encouraging on the scope for using information interventions to improve the monitoring of education service providers in India. Using a different community-based information cam- paign, Pandey, Goyal, and Sundararaman (2009) report more supportive results in the same setting. 8. What follows is not a complete list of the reasons. Useful overviews of the arguments and evidence on other social and behavioral factors relevant to the success of information campaigns can be found in Keefer and Khemani (2005) and, in the context of immunization campaigns, Cappelen, Mæstad, and Tungodden (2010). 9. A GS is a body of all persons in the electoral roll for a Gram Panchayat. The Gram Panchayat convenes meetings of the GS to disseminate informa- tion as well as to enable all households to participate in decisions relating to development of the village. 10. Bihar was one of the first states to introduce PRIs, and GP elections were held every three to six years from 1952 until 1978. However, subse- quently, no GP-level elections were held in the state until as late as 2001. For evidence on the differing performance of the panchayats across India, see Mathew and Buch (2000). 11. Estimates are based on official Planning Commission poverty lines for 2009/10. OVERVIEW 19 12. In a marked departure from past trends, official estimates for 2011–12 indicate a steep reduction in rural poverty to 34 percent in the two-year period since 2009–10. 13. Flood Management Information System, Water Resources Department, government of Bihar, available at http://fmis.bih.nic.in/history.htm. 14. These districts were Araria, Aurangabad, Bhabhua, Bhojpur, Darbhanga, Gaya, Jamui, Jehanabad, Katihar, Kishanganj, Lakhisarai, Madhubani, Munger, Muzaffarpur, Nalanda, Nawada, Patna, Rohtas, Samastipur, Sheohar, Supaul, and Vaishali. 15. Works can also be introduced by the block- and district-level bodies, but have to be approved by the GS, which may accept, amend, or reject them. 16. SC/STs comprise population groupings that are explicitly recognized by the Indian Constitution. SC/STs are earmarked for special treatment such as reservations in public sector employment and government-run educa- tional institutions. 17. A number of studies use the phasing in of the scheme across districts to evaluate the impacts of MGNREGS using a double-difference approach (see Azam 2011; Liu and Deininger 2013; Ravi and Engler 2013; Imbert and Papp 2012; and Berg and others 2012). 18. Jha, Gaiha, and Pandey (2012) also ask survey respondents working on MGNREGS whether they thought any other work was available. They do not, however, ask for forgone incomes, but instead use prevailing wage rates for the imputation. 19. See Ravallion (2008). Note that this would be true even if one could observe a group of participants randomly assigned to the program and com- pare them with those “randomized out” of the program, or if a counterfac- tual outcome were estimated by propensity score matching procedures. 20. Very few states actually exhaust the central funds for administrative expenditure so do not, in general, have to invest from their own budgets. However, there are opportunity costs of time with regard to state capabili- ties being mobilized to develop systems and recruit and manage the skilled manpower, such as the panchayat rozgar sewak, and so forth. References Aakella, K. V., and Sowmya Kidambi. 2007. “Social Audits in Andhra Pradesh: A Process in Evolution.” Economic and Political Weekly 42 (47): 18–19. Aiyar, Yamini, Soumya Kapoor Mehta, and Salimah Samji. 2011. “Strengthening Public Accountability: Lessons from Implementing Social Audits in Andhra Pradesh.” Accountability Initiative Working Paper, Center for Policy Research, New Delhi. 20 RIGHT TO WORK? Aiyar, Yamini, and Salimah Samji. 2009. “Transparency and Accountability in NREGA: A Case Study of Andhra Pradesh.” Accountability Initiative Working Paper No. 1, Center for Policy Research, New Delhi. Azam, Mehtabul. 2011. “The Impact of Indian Job Guarantee Scheme on Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from a Natural Experiment.” IZA Discussion Paper No. 6548, Institute for the Study of Labor, Bonn. Banerjee, Abhijit, Rukmini Banerji, Esther Duflo, Rachel Glennerster, and Stuti Khemani. 2010. “Pitfalls of Participatory Programs: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation in Education in India.” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 2 (1): 1–30. Basu, Arnab K. 2013. “Impact of Rural Employment Guarantee Schemes on Seasonal Labor Markets: Optimum Compensation and Workers’ Welfare.” Journal of Economic Inequality 11 (1): 1–34. ———, Nancy H. Chau, and Ravi Kanbur. 2009. “A Theory of Employment Guarantees: Contestability, Credibility and Distributional Concerns.” Journal of Public Economics 93: 482–97. Berg, Erlend, Sambit Bhattacharyya, Rajasekhar Durgam, and Manjula Ramachandra. 2012. “Can Rural Public Works Affect Agricultural Wages? Evidence from India.” Working Paper WPS/2012-05, University of Oxford, Center for the Study of African Economies, Oxford, U.K. Besley, Timothy, and Robin Burgess. 2003. “The Political Economy of Government Responsiveness: Theory and Evidence from India.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 117 (4): 1415–51. Besley, Timothy, and Stephen Coate. 1992. “Workfare vs. Welfare: Incentive Arguments for Work Requirements in Poverty Alleviation Programs.” American Economic Review 82 (1): 249–61. Besley, Timothy, Rohini Pande, and Vijayendra Rao. 2005. “Participatory Democracy in Action: Survey Evidence from South India.” Journal of the European Economic Association 3 (2–3): 648–57. Cappelen, Alexander, Ottar Mæstad, and Bertil Tungodden. 2010. “Demand for Childhood Vaccination—Insights from Behavioral Economics.” Forum for Development Studies 37 (3): 349–64. Dasgupta, Partha. 1993. An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Datt, Gaurav, and Martin Ravallion. 2002. “Has India’s Post-Reform Economic Growth Left the Poor Behind?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 16 (3): 89–108. Drèze, Jean. 1990. “Famine Prevention in India.” In The Political Economy of Hunger, Volume 2, edited by Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen, 13–122. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ———. 2004. “Employment as a Social Responsibility.” The Hindu, November 22. http://www.hindu.com/2004/11/22/stories/2004112205071000 .htm. OVERVIEW 21 ———, and Christian Oldiges. 2011. “NREGA: The Official Picture.” In The Battle for Employment Guarantee, edited by Reetika Khera. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. Drèze, Jean, and Amartya Sen. 1989. Hunger and Public Action. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Echeverri-Gent, John. 1988. “Guaranteed Employment in an Indian State: The Maharashtran Experience.” Asian Survey 28: 1294–310. Government of India. 2006. “Report of the Technical Group on Population Projections Constituted by the National Commission on Population.” Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner, New Delhi. Imbert, Clément, and John Papp. 2012. “Equilibrium Distributional Impacts of Government Employment Programs: Evidence from India’s Employment Guarantee.” Paris School of Economics Working Paper No. 2012 - 14. Paris School of Economics, Paris. Jensen, Robert, and Emily Oster. 2009. “The Power of TV: Cable Television and Women’s Status in India.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 124 (3): 1057–94. Jha, Raghbendra, Raghav Gaiha, and Manoj K. Pandey. 2012. “Net Transfer Benefits under India’s Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme.” Journal of Policy Modeling g 34 (2): 296–311. Keefer, Philip, and Stuti Khemani. 2005. “Democracy, Public Expenditures, and the Poor: Understanding Political Incentives for Providing Public Services.” World Bank Research Observer 20 (1): 1–28. La Ferrara, Eliana, Alberto Chong, and Suzanne Duryea. 2012. “Soap Operas and Fertility: Evidence from Brazil.” American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 4 (4): 1–31. Liu, Yanyan, and Klaus Deininger. 2013. “Welfare and Poverty Impacts of India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Evidence from Andhra Pradesh.” Policy Research Working Paper No. 6543, World Bank, Washington, DC. Mathew, George, and Nirmala Buch. 2000. Status of Panchayati Raj in the States and Union Territories of India 2000. New Delhi: Institute of Social Studies. Murgai, Rinku, and Martin Ravallion. 2005a. “Employment Guarantee in Rural India: What Would It Cost and How Much Would It Reduce Poverty?” Economic and Political Weekly, July 30, 3450–55. ———. 2005b. “Is a Guaranteed Living Wage a Good Anti-Poverty Policy?” Policy Research Working Paper No. 3460, World Bank, Washington, DC. National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO). 2009/10. “Socio- Economic Survey Sixty-Sixth Round Schedule 10: Employment and Unemployment.” Government of India, New Delhi. Pandey, Priyanka, Sangeeta Goyal, and Venkatesh Sundararaman. 2009. “Community Participation in Public Schools: Impacts of Information 22 RIGHT TO WORK? Campaigns in Three Indian States.” Education Economics 13 (3): 355–75. Ravallion, Martin. 1990. “Market Responses to Anti-Hunger Policies: Wages, Prices, and Employment.” In The Political Economy of Hunger, Volume 2, edited by Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen, 241–78. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ———. 1991. “Reaching the Rural Poor through Public Employment: Arguments, Evidence, and Lessons from South Asia.” World Bank Research Observer 6 (2): 153–75. ———. 2008, “Evaluating Anti-Poverty Programs.” In Handbook of Development Economics, Volume 4, edited by Paul Schultz and John Strauss. Amsterdam: North-Holland. ———, Gaurav Datt, and Shubham Chaudhuri. 1993. “Does Maharashtra’s ‘Employment Guarantee Scheme’ Guarantee Employment? Effects of the 1988 Wage Increase.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 41: 251–75. Ravi, Shamika, and Monika Engler. 2013. “Workfare as an Effective Way to Fight Poverty: The Case of India’s NREGS.” http://ssrn.com /abstract=1336837. Reinikka, Ritva, and Jakob Svensson. 2005. “Improving Schooling by Combating Corruption: Evidence from a Newspaper Campaign in Uganda.” Journal of the European Economic Association 3(2–3): 259–67. Strömberg, David. 2004. “Radio’s Impact on Public Spending.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 119 (1): 189–221. World Bank. 2011. Social Protection for a Changing India. Human Development Unit, South Asia Department. Washington, DC: World Bank. 1 Does India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme Guarantee Employment? The idea of an “employment guarantee” is clearly important for the full benefits of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employ- ment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) to be realized. The gains depend heavily on the scheme’s ability to accommodate the supply of work to the demand for it. If MGNREGS in practice worked the way it was designed, there would be no unmet demand for work on the scheme. Anyone who wanted that work would get it. This is, of course, an exacting standard. In reality there may be frictions in implementation leading to some unmet demand for work, such that those wanting work do not get it in a timely man- ner. The extent to which the employment guarantee is honored will depend, in part, on how effectively and quickly the scheme responds to demand. We begin this chapter with some theoretical arguments about why we might observe rationing of MGNREGS work even when there are no such frictions in responding quickly to demand. In other words, the employment guarantee required by the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (the Act, or NREGA) is not necessarily attainable for more fundamental reasons. We then turn to the evi- dence for India as a whole before, in subsequent chapters, taking a much closer look at the scheme’s performance in Bihar. 23 24 RIGHT TO WORK? Why an Employment Guarantee Need Not Be Attainable The simplest way that unmet demand can emerge is when an employment guarantee scheme faces a hard budget constraint and the wage rate is set too high, given the demand for work on the scheme. A condition must be satisfied—expenditure on the program must not exceed the budget available—and rationing may be the only way to keep expenditure in check given the wage rate and the budget. For example, compelling evidence indicates that rationing emerged in the antecedent scheme to MGNREGS, Maharashtra’s Employment Guarantee Scheme, when the wage rate on the scheme was increased substantially in line with revised statutory minimum wage rates (Ravallion, Datt, and Chaudhuri 1993).1 The rationing occurred mainly because of sluggishness in the opening of new work sites in response to demand. Unmet demand can also emerge as an equilibrium outcome even when the central government makes an open-ended commitment for funding. We consider three ways this can happen. First is the scheme’s role in local electoral politics. MGNREGS provides impor- tant resources for locally elected leaders to use to attract voters (see, for example, the interesting discussion in Witsoe 2012). For this pur- pose, local officials up for reelection must be able to control access to the scheme—to be seen as the benefactor, not simply the conduit for the central government. Thus, the very idea of an “employment guarantee” can be antithetical to local political processes. Those in power locally have little or no incentive to give up their ability to control who benefits from public spending, for that is in large part the way they maintain their power. Second, local administrative costs, not all of which are evident in official data, must be considered. The provisions of the Act do not imply that there will be zero cost to local (state or lower level) budgets when employing workers under MGNREGS. As described in box O.1, the center covers a large share of the cost, but rela- tively skilled manpower at the local level is still required for orga- nizing projects and workers. This cost will tend to be higher for governments with generally weak administrative capabilities or weak Panchayati Raj Institutions, which have a key role to play in MGNREGS implementation. This need not be true of all govern- ments in poor areas. However, as a rule, just as unskilled manpower tends to be abundant in poor areas, skilled manpower is scarce. And relatively skilled manpower is needed to manage a scheme such as MGNREGS, including for registering demand, vetting project pro- posals, drawing up the technical estimates and engineering plans, INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 25 ensuring the required monitoring and reporting take place, and managing scheme funds, including reporting back to the center to access funds. The scarcity of skilled manpower or strong Panchayati Raj Institutions tends to make it harder, and more costly, for poor areas to implement such a complex scheme. The limited available skilled manpower will have a high opportunity cost if diverted to MGNREGS projects. Arguably no less important to the functioning of the scheme at the local level will be the availability of “brokers” (variously called vichawlia or dalal) who can be trusted by local leaders to mediate between them and the various stakeholders, including workers but also local officials and landowners. Based on close observation from field work, Witsoe (2012, 50) explains the role of NREGA brokers in Bihar as follows: NREGA brokers had to be trusted allies of the mukhia [Mukhiya] (or else the mukhia would be unwilling to delegate so much power to them), had to have experience working with the block staff and bank manager, had to be able to recruit and manage laborers, while also “managing” landowners, and had to have the liquidity and drive to “invest” in a potentially rewarding but also somewhat risky enterprise. People with such a special- ized skill set were in short supply. Given the complexities of implementing NREGA, and the realities of weak state capacity at the local level, without brokers, the project would likely not have functioned at all. Thus, the local administrative cost of such a scheme may be quite high, especially when one takes into account these typically hidden and scarce brokerage functions. To see what the scarcity of capacity implies for the scheme, we assume that the local government faces a trade-off between the administrative cost incurred per worker employed on MGNREGS and the benefits of extra local employment. (“Local government” can mean any level below the center; similar trade-offs will presumably apply for both the state government and the local village-level government.) Of course, the local govern- ment cares about the cost, given by the unit cost times the number of workers employed under the scheme. At the same time, we assume that it also cares about the amount of unmet demand for work on MGNREGS. The local government has the option of not hiring everyone who wants work, but it does not want to drive employment on the scheme down to zero. We can imagine that the central govern- ment imposes some explicit penalty (in this case, an unemployment allowance), or that the local government is sympathetic with the objectives of the scheme, or that it perceives a likely political penalty 26 RIGHT TO WORK? of unmet demand for work. For example, unemployment might gen- erate protests from those whose demands for work are unsatisfied or from civil society groups sympathetic with the interests of potential MGNREGS workers. Future prospects for reelection might also be jeopardized. These penalties can be assumed to fall to zero when there is no unmet demand for work on the scheme but to rise with higher unmet demand. It seems plausible that the penalties will rise more steeply as the excess demand rises; at very high levels of unmet demand the protests may be vastly greater than at low levels. So in implementing the scheme, the local government faces a trade-off between the cost of employing workers under MGNREGS and its desire to meet the demand for work as required by the Act. In the states with high administrative capability, there may be little trade-off. Indeed, if the unit administrative cost is sufficiently low (in the precise sense defined in box 1.1), the local government will choose to honor the employment guarantee. But that cost may be quite high in very poor states with weak capability for organiz- ing, supervising, and administering the work. Scarce skilled man- power within the local administration will need to be diverted to the scheme, at a potentially high opportunity cost, which cannot be covered by the center. In fact, with a sufficiently high administrative unit cost facing the local government, its desired level of employment has a particu- larly simple form, as described in box 1.1. There will be a critical minimum level of demand before any work will be provided on the scheme. The higher the unit cost of providing work, the higher will be this critical minimum. As long as demand rises above this point, work will be provided, given by the difference between the level of demand actually observed in the state and its own critical minimum. At sufficiently low administrative costs, the local government will choose to comply with the employment guarantee and employ all those who want work. The third way that the guarantee might not be attainable locally is through what is often called “local corruption” (see box 1.2). Much discussion of corruption on MGNREGS has occurred, particularly in the Indian media. Some have also tried to explain, model, or assess leakage (Niehaus and Sukhtankar forthcoming; Imbert and Papp 2011). Of course, corruption is hardly unique to this scheme, and is also found in schemes that favor the nonpoor. However, the fact that MGNREGS is intended to fight poverty adds extra indigna- tion about corruption. “Corruption” is not easily identified, though we note a number of suggestive instances from both the field observations and the sur- vey data; for example, corruption is one possible interpretation of INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 27 Box 1.1 Effect of Local-Level Costs on Meeting Demand under MGNREGS The central government dictates that the local government should provide work for all those who want it at the stipulated wage rate. The central government pays the unskilled labor cost. The local gov- ernment chooses the level of employment E to minimize a generalized cost function: cE + p(D – E) subject to E ≤ D, (1.1.1) in which c is the unit administrative cost of the skilled labor that the local government must finance and p(·) penalizes the unmet demand for work, given an exogenous demand for work, D. It is assumed that the penalty function p is strictly increasing and convex with p(0) = 0. Let E* denote the level of employment that equates the marginal pen- alty with the unit cost of skilled labor: p′(D – E*) = c. Inverting this function we have E* = D – f(c), (1.1.2) in which f(·) is the inverse function of p′(·). The value of f(c) can be interpreted as the minimum level of demand for work before the local government will begin to hire any MGNREGS workers. It is readily verified that f(c) > 0 and f ′(c) > 0. If there is rationing in equilibrium, it will be in the amount f(c). Above this, E* rises one for one with D. We can distinguish two regimes: In Regime 1, the level of c is “sufficiently high,” in that c > c* where c* = p[f(c)]/ /f(c), which is the Figure B1.1.1 Theoretical Relationship between Work Provided and Demand for Work work Slope = 1 provided (E) demand for work (D) minimum demand f(c) e (Continued on the following page) 28 RIGHT TO WORK? Box 1.1 (Continued) penalty at the minimum level of demand per unit of demand. If c exceeds this critical level, the cost of employing E* workers is less than the cost of employing all those who want work. Then E* is the opti- mal level of employment provided and there will be unmet demand in equilibrium, in that E* < D with f(c) workers rationed out of jobs. A reduction in the unit administrative cost will increase employment and reduce rationing. In Regime 2 we have c ≤ c*, so the local govern- ment will choose to comply with the dictate to employ all those who want work. the discrepancies between the survey-based estimates of wages paid and the administrative data for Bihar, although measurement errors may also be playing a role. However, we do not pay a great deal of explicit attention to corruption in this book. Instead, we focus on the public administrative processes that can either foster or help reduce corruption. Nonetheless, one issue pertaining to corruption merits attention here, namely, the possibility that it might undermine the guarantee. At first this claim seems surprising. One might expect corruption at the local level on such a scheme to eliminate any unmet demand for MGNREGS work. By this view, corrupt local officials will gain by hiring more workers and taking their “slice” of wage outlays. Thus, corruption would eliminate any rationing. However, this argument ignores the complexity of MGNREGS and how it works in the context of village politics. There are many checks in force, as is evident from the description of the scheme in box O.1. These checks mean that local officials can face a steep marginal cost of corruption. Corruption may then be perfectly con- sistent with unmet demand for work in equilibrium. To make this point sharply, box 1.2 describes a simple model of local corruption that will yield rationing of work as an equilibrium outcome. There is a demand constraint, but it only requires that the officials cannot employ more workers than want work; the constraint is not nec- essarily binding. Beyond some level of employment, local officials will risk being exposed for the corruption. For example, they may need to go beyond their “comfort zone” in the people (especially the aforementioned “NREGA brokers”) they trust to collude in the corruption. The “bribes bill” will start to rise sharply. The steep marginal cost faced by local leaders will then limit the scope for expansion in the scheme, leaving unmet demand in equilibrium. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 29 Box 1.2 Corruption and the Unmet Demand for Work Suppose that local officials choose the level of employment E given an exogenous demand for work on the scheme D to maximize profit: R(E) – C(E) subject to E ≤ D. (1.2.1) Here R(E) is the official’s own revenue from corruption at employ- ment level E and C(E) is the cost of corruption. The marginal benefit (MB) is R′(E) and the marginal cost (MC) is C′(E). It is assumed that R′′(E) < C′′(E). Then there will be unmet demand in equilibrium if E* < D, where R′(E*) = C′(E*), as illustrated in figure B1.2.1. (The MB function need not be decreasing, though we draw it as such.) To make these functions more concrete we can suppose that for each person employed, the local official gets a share of their wage on the scheme, but is constrained by the local market wage rate for unskilled labor, denoted w. The official’s share will then be 1 – w/wEGS and R(E) = (wEGS S– w)E. One can generalize this further by allowing for the possibility that higher E puts upward pressure on the market wage rate, implying that MB is not constant. The cost of corruption C(E) can be interpreted as the side payments that the local official must make to cooperating agents. The total cost rises with the number of workers employed because more workers will require that more worksites be opened and that “ghost workers” be paid more, with further side payments required to cooperating officials. It can also be expected that the marginal cost will rise as employment rises; the local official may have to expand the set of people he bribes beyond his own “comfort zone” of those he trusts, and even those he trusts will face larger risks of exposure at large scale, and so require higher compensation. Figure B1.2.1 Theoretical Model of the Optimal Employment Provided by a Corrupt Local Official marginal cost or marginal benefit to local official MC MB employment provided E* D under the scheme e (Continued on the following page) 30 RIGHT TO WORK? Box 1.2 (Continued) Two remarks can be made about the implications of this model. First, notice that an increase in the marginal cost of corruption facing the local official will decrease employment and increase rationing (as can be seen in the figure B1.2.1). Second, notice that an increase in the wage rate on the scheme (where R(E) = (wEGS – w)) will increase employment on the scheme, even though there is rationing. However, the gain in wages will go entirely to the local officials, not to the work- ers on the scheme. This model suggests that efforts to reduce local corruption by increasing its marginal cost will increase the extent of rationing (box 1.2). To the extent that efforts to “tighten up” the scheme focus on poor states and aim to increase the marginal cost of local corruption—such as by introducing more checks or imposing stricter reporting requirements or higher penalties that vary with the scale of the corruption uncovered—this model can explain why we might find more rationing in poor states, especially if they already have weaker monitoring mechanisms. The solution to corruption in this situation is to make the model outlined in box 1.2 irrelevant to the behavior of local officials. That requires that local officials have no power to enforce rationing in the first place, so that the demand constraint becomes binding on their behavior. For the demand constraint to be binding those who want work under the scheme must be aware that the law entitles them to that work (or to an unemployment allowance if the work cannot be provided) and must be able to act on that awareness. Thus, adequate administrative and legal processes must be in place for addressing grievances and for punishing local officials who do not comply with the law. Ultimately, a demand constraint that is not binding on local officials can be taken to reflect in no small measure the administra- tive capabilities of the state. Performance in Meeting the Demand for Work across States The participation rate P in MGNREGS can be defined as the pro- portion of rural households that obtain work on the scheme. The participation rate can be thought of as the product of the demand rate D, defined as the proportion of rural households that want work on the scheme, and one minus the rationing rate R, defined as INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 31 the proportion of those who wanted work but did not get it. Thus, for state i we have the following identity: Pi = (1 − Ri)Di, (i = 1, ..., n). (1.1) Notice that the share of households that are rationed is the prod- uct of the rationing rate and the demand rate. We shall call this the unmet demand, denoted Ui ≡ RiDi = Di − Pi. How can the true demand for work, and hence the rationing rate, be measured? The administrative data indicate virtually no unmet demand for work on MGNREGS. According to the administrative data, 52.865 million households in India demanded work in 2009/10, and 99.4 percent of them (52.530 million) were provided work.2 However, these numbers are deceptive. What is called “demand for work” in the administrative data is the official registration of demand, recorded by local officials. For instance, in Bihar, as in several other states, the administrative data claim that exactly 100 percent of those who demanded work got it. Yet we know from several studies that the work application process and the system for recording demand for work accurately are not yet in place (Khera 2011). Furthermore, state and local governments have an incentive not to report unmet demand given that they should then be paying unemployment allow- ances (box O.1). Also, some people will undoubtedly be deterred from formally demanding work from the officials, or do not even know that they have the right to make such demands. A better measure of demand for work can be obtained by ask- ing people directly in their homes and independently of the scheme. That is what the surveys used in this study provide. In this section we will rely on the 66th Round of the National Sample Survey (NSS), conducted between July 2009 and June 2010, in all states. The Employment-Unemployment module (Schedule 10.0) of the sur- vey included questions on participation and demand for work in MGNREGS, which allows us to estimate the demand and rationing rates across states. Three questions on the program were included: (1) whether the household has a job card; (2) whether it got work on the scheme during the last 365 days, for which responses were coded under three options—got work, sought but did not get work, and did not seek work on MGNREGS; and (3) if the household got work, number of days of work and mode of payment. In addition, the “daily status” block collected information on activities for all household members during the week preceding the survey, includ- ing number of days worked and wages received, if they worked on MGNREGS public works. In this chapter we limit the definition of participation and rationing to whether households got work or did not get work. Unmet demand 32 RIGHT TO WORK? can also take the form of getting fewer days of work than desired. Many households that participated were no doubt rationed in that they would have liked more days of work and still had fewer than the 100 days stipulated by the Act. We have no choice but to ignore this aspect of the scheme’s performance because the NSS did not ask how many more days of work the household wanted; all we know is whether the household wanted more work on the scheme. (We were able to relax this constraint in the Bihar survey, as is discussed in later chapters.) Table 1.1 gives the results by state for the participation rate, the demand rate, and the rationing rate. (The table also gives the female share of employment, to which we return later.) “Demand” is defined as either getting work on the scheme or seeking work but not getting it. For India as a whole, 45 percent of rural households wanted work on the scheme. Of these, 56 percent got work—a national ration- ing rate of 44 percent. The rationing rate varied from 15 percent in Rajasthan to 84 percent in Maharashtra. Only three states have rationing rates of less than 20 percent. Bihar has the third-highest rationing rate. There is clearly large excess demand for work. The data in table 1.1 display a puzzling feature: participation rates are only weakly correlated with rural poverty rates across states as further illustrated in figure 1.1. If MGNREGS worked the way the Act intended, this weak correlation would be surprising because one would expect the scheme to be more attractive to poor people, and hence to have higher take-up in poorer states. The same point holds for public spending on MGNREGS. Table 1.2 provides summary statistics on spending per capita for 2009/10 and 2010/11. The cor- relation between MGNREGS spending per capita and the poverty rate is −0.02 using spending in 2009/10 and 0.04 for 2010/11. Bihar stands out in these data as having one of the highest rural poverty rates and one of the lowest MGNREGS participation rates. Bihar’s participation rate is 0.22 below the regression line in figure 1.1, making it an outlier (t-statistic = −3.16, using a White standard error).3 This is in stark contrast to states like Chhattis- garh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and West Bengal, which per- form better in providing employment under the scheme. As noted above, at the all-India level, 56 percent of those households that wanted work on MGNREGS actually got it. In Bihar, rationing was 78 percent; fewer than one-quarter of those rural households that reported in the NSS that they wanted work on the scheme actually got it. However, when we look at variation in the demand rate, we see the expected positive correlation with the poverty rate (with a cor- relation coefficient r = 0.50) (figure 1.2). Poorer states tend to have Table 1.1 Summary MGNREGS Statistics, 2009/10 Headcount index Rationing rate Female share of of poverty Participation rate Demand rate (share (share of rural employment on (% of population (share of rural of rural households households that MGNREGS below poverty households working that want work on wanted work but (% of total person State line) on MGNREGS) MGNREGS) did not get it) days) Andhra Pradesh 20.6 0.354 0.472 0.249 58.1 Assam 42.3 0.182 0.413 0.559 27.7 Bihar 56.5 0.099 0.461 0.785 30.0 Chhattisgarh 56.4 0.479 0.690 0.306 49.2 Gujarat 32.5 0.215 0.382 0.438 47.5 Haryana 24.2 0.051 0.195 0.738 35.6 Himachal Pradesh 11.9 0.334 0.418 0.202 46.0 Jammu and Kashmir — 0.097 0.334 0.709 7.0 Jharkhand 43.5 0.192 0.517 0.628 34.3 Karnataka 31.3 0.080 0.228 0.648 36.8 Kerala 11.7 0.112 0.232 0.517 88.2 Madhya Pradesh 45.9 0.406 0.646 0.371 44.3 Maharashtra 33.9 0.044 0.277 0.840 39.8 (Continued on the following page) 33 34 Table 1.1 (Continued) Headcount index Rationing rate Female share of of poverty Participation rate Demand rate (share (share of rural employment on (% of population (share of rural of rural households households that MGNREGS below poverty households working that want work on wanted work but (% of total person State line) on MGNREGS) MGNREGS) did not get it) days) Orissa 49.9 0.220 0.507 0.567 36.3 Punjab 19.4 0.052 0.312 0.833 26.0 Rajasthan 31.2 0.618 0.732 0.155 66.9 Tamil Nadu 22.8 0.335 0.414 0.190 82.9 Uttar Pradesh 40.8 0.162 0.350 0.536 21.7 Uttarakhand — 0.292 0.406 0.280 40.1 West Bengal 35.1 0.432 0.658 0.344 33.4 All India 36.4 0.249 0.447 0.444 48.1 Sources: Poverty rates are based on 2004/05 Tendulkar poverty lines updated to 2009/10 using state-specific consumer price indices for agricultural laborers (CPIAL) and per capita consumption expenditures in Schedule 1.0 of the National Sample Survey. Poverty rates for Jammu and Kashmir and Uttarakhand are not reported because data are not available on state-level CPIAL. The female share of person days is from MGNREGS administrative data (http://nrega.nic.in). The remaining columns are from the authors’ calculations from unit record data of 2009/10 National Sample Survey Schedule 1.0 (for headcount index) and Schedule 10.0. Note: Households with missing values (that did not respond to the question on whether they got, sought, or did not want work on MGNREGS) are excluded from the sample when participation, demand, and rationing rates are estimated. MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme; — = not available. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 35 Figure 1.1 There Is No Correlation between Participation Rates in MGNREGS and the Incidence of Poverty across Indian States 0.7 r = 0.13 0.6 participation rate in MGNREGS (share of rural households) 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 headcount index of rural poverty 2009/10 Source: Table 1.1. Note: MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. a higher percentage of households that want work on MGNREGS, as one would expect. The reason this is not evident in figure 1.1 is that the rationing rate also varies and is no lower in poorer states; indeed, it is positively correlated with the poverty rate, though only weakly so (r = 0.183). It is this interstate variation in the rationing rate that explains why the participation rate is uncorrelated with the poverty rate across states. The demand for MGNREGS work is also lower in Bihar than would be expected, even given the state’s high poverty rate. Bihar is an outlier in figure 1.2, with a demand rate for MGNREGS 0.14 below the regression line (t = −2.58). At a similar poverty rate, Chhattisgarh has a participation rate almost five times higher than that in Bihar. Public spending in Bihar is also lower than one would expect, and roughly one-third the level in Chhattisgarh. Poorer states have greater excess demand for MGNREGS, as can be seen in figure 1.3. Figure 1.3 plots the share of the rural population that is rationed—that is, the rationing rate times the demand rate—against the poverty rate. The extent of this unmet demand is not only greatest in Bihar but high given its poverty rate, with a value 0.05 above the regression line, making 36 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 1.2 Program Expenditure per Capita across States Expenditure per capita (rupees) State 2009/10 2010/11 Andhra Pradesh 749 896 Assam 406 358 Bihar 214 309 Chhattisgarh 723 884 Gujarat 214 226 Haryana 87 128 Himachal Pradesh 936 837 Jammu and Kashmir 221 445 Jharkhand 586 539 Karnataka 742 683 Kerala 186 276 Madhya Pradesh 734 707 Maharashtra 54 60 Orissa 281 455 Punjab 89 98 Rajasthan 1,133 647 Tamil Nadu 555 744 Uttar Pradesh 389 365 Uttarakhand 406 539 West Bengal 335 399 All India 464 477 Sources: Cumulative expenditures (including wage and nonwage spending) in cur- rent prices during the 2009/10 and 2010/11 fiscal years were obtained from the Ministry of Rural Development website (http://nrega.nic.in). Note: To calculate expenditure per capita, the population projections for 2009 and 2010 from the Registrar General of India were used. it a statistical outlier (t = 2.93). Therefore, the extent of unmet demand is greater in Bihar for reasons in addition to its high poverty rate. Something else is going wrong. We will learn more about this in later chapters. The rationing rate is highly negatively correlated with the partici- pation rate (r = −0.882). This outcome is not surprising given how the rationing rate is defined, though the strength of the correlation will also depend on the way the participation rate varies with the demand rate, to which we now turn. Although rationing is common, there is much less evidence of rationing at the margin than on average. As the model in box 1.1 indicates, the average participation rate could be lower than the marginal participation rate among those who wanted work on MGNREGS, given that a certain minimum level of demand in a INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 37 Figure 1.2 Demand for MGNREGS Work Is Greater in Poorer States 0.8 r = 0.50 demand rate: share of rural households 0.7 0.6 that want work 0.5 Bihar 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 headcount index of rural poverty 2009/10 Source: Table 1.1. Note: MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. Figure 1.3 Poorer States Have Greater Unmet Demand for Work on MGNREGS 0.40 share of rural households that were rationed r = 0.74 Bihar 0.35 Jharkhand 0.30 Orissa Punjab 0.25 Chhattisgarh 0.20 0.15 Kerala Rajasthan 0.10 Tamil Nadu h Himachal Pradesh 0.05 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 headcount index of rural poverty 2009/10 Source: Table 1.1. Note: MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. 38 RIGHT TO WORK? given state is probably necessary before work is provided. Indeed, the marginal rate could also exceed unity. For example, it is possible that when an extra household expresses demand for work, not only does that household get work, but there is a spillover effect on others who wanted work but had not yet gotten it. The data across the states provide striking confirmation of the model in box 1.1. Figure 1.4 shows the relationship between the MGNREGS participation rate and demand for MGNREGS work. Whereas the average participation rate among those who want work is 0.56, the marginal rate (as indicated by the regression coefficient of employment on demand for work) is 0.91 (with a robust standard error of 0.09); the intercept on the horizontal axis is 0.17 (standard error = 0.03), imply- ing that the scheme would not have come into action if demand for work was less than 17 percent of the population of rural households. Thus, once the minimum level of demand for work is reached, extra demand is being met, on average. The low average participation rate reflects the existence of the positive lower bound on demand, below which work is not provided. Following the logic of box 1.1, this lower bound can be interpreted as the effect of the costs incurred by state and local governments. Figure 1.4 There Is Less Rationing at the Margin Than on Average across States 0.7 actual employment on MGNREGS 0.6 Slope = 0.909 (share of rural households) 0.5 (standard error = 0.093) 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 demand for MGNREGS (share of rural households that want work) Source: Table 1.1. Note: MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 39 Again, Bihar is performing poorly relative to other states. Bihar has roughly the national average demand for work on MGNREGS, with 46 percent of rural households saying they want this work, as compared with 45 percent in India as a whole. However, as we have already seen, the extent of rationing is particularly high in Bihar; the actual level of employment on MGNREGS is 10 percent of Bihar’s rural households, while the relationship for all of India implied by the regression line in figure 1.4 indicates that 26 percent of rural households in Bihar would have gotten work.4 Why is MGNREGS not more active in poorer states? We postulate that being a poor state has two opposing effects on participation. First, greater poverty has an effect via a higher demand for MGNREGS work. Call this the “demand effect” of poverty. We see confirmation of this in figure 1.2, which illus- trates the expected positive correlation between demand for work and the poverty rate. The second effect is that poorer states tend to have greater unmet demand for work on the scheme. Call this the “rationing effect.” We suggest three reasons for the rationing effect on participation to work in a direction opposite that of the demand effect. First, poorer states will be less able to afford that share of the costs that are borne by state and local governments. Second, poorer states will tend to have weaker capacity for administering such a scheme, or may have weak Panchayati Raj Institutions, which have a key role in implementation. Third, the poor may be less empowered in poorer states. As shown in the next section, both poor and nonpoor people have a demand for work on the scheme, though the demand is greater among the poor. If poor people tend to have less power to influence local decision making (reflected in lower awareness of their rights under the Act), a higher poverty rate will lead the state government to put less weight on the need to accommodate their demand for work.5 These data tell us nothing about the relative importance of these three factors on the overall rationing effect. But we can certainly con- firm evidence of a rationing effect. Poorer states have greater unmet demand for MGNREGS, as can be seen in figure 1.3. However, the variation among poorer states should be noted. Some of the poorest states (Bihar, Jharkhand, and Orissa) have low participation rates and high levels of unmet demand. In contrast, other poor states such as Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and West Bengal per- form better in providing employment under the scheme. For example, even with a similar poverty rate, Chhattisgarh has a participation rate almost five times that of Bihar (table 1.1). Public spending is also lower in Bihar, at roughly one-third of the level in Chhattisgarh. 40 RIGHT TO WORK? Using the identity in equation (1.1), a simple regression decompo- sition can be used to identify these two effects in the data:6 Di = αD + βDHi + εiD, (1.2) Ui = αU + βUHi + εiU. (1.3) (Here εik for k = D, U are zero-mean regression error terms, and αk, βk are parameters.) Thus, equation (1.2) minus equation (1.3) gives how the overall participation rate varies with the state headcount index of rural poverty H. The regression coefficient of demand for MGNREGS (based on the NSS responses) on the state poverty rate is 0.583 (standard error = 0.189), meaning that a 10 percentage point increase in the poverty rate comes with about a 6 percentage point increase in the share of rural households demanding MGNREGS work, on average. The regression coefficient of U on H is 0.434 (standard error = 0.097). The net effect (the estimate of βD − βU) is 0.149, but it is not significantly different from zero (standard error = 0.293). Statistically, the two opposing effects can be said to can- cel each other out, giving the relationship in figure 1.1, whereby poorer states have no higher participation in MGNREGS, despite the greater demand for work on the scheme. Note that Bihar is, again, an outlier, with a participation rate that is about 7 percentage points lower than one would expect given both its demand for work and its poverty rate. Something else is going on in Bihar. We have seen that demand for work is lower than expected given Bihar’s poverty rate (figure 1.2). The chapters that follow examine the role of both of the factors identified above— weak capacity to implement and lower awareness of entitlements and processes among poor people. Furthermore, we argue that changing one alone will not ensure that the scheme will achieve its potential in Bihar. Effective action on both fronts will be necessary. Targeting By insisting that participants do physically demanding manual work at a low wage rate, workfare schemes such as MGNREGS aim to be self-targeted, in that nonpoor people will not want to participate. The substantial unmet demand demonstrated above raises the ques- tion of how well this self-targeting mechanism works in practice. The rationing of the available work does not mean that targeting will not be pro-poor. For one thing, the manual work requirement at a low wage rate will still discourage many nonpoor people from INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 41 wanting to participate. For another, the local authorities doing the rationing may favor the poor. The local officials who are deciding who gets work could either enhance or diminish the scheme’s target- ing performance. A number of quantitative studies have explored the targeting performance of MGNREGS based on selected samples. The tests used have often been problematic.7 Dutta and others (2012) use India’s 2009/10 NSS to provide the first comprehensive national assessment of targeting performance. Liu and Barrett (2013) expand on that analysis to provide more state-specific detail. What, then, does the evidence from the NSS survey for 2009/10 suggest? Table 1.3 gives the participation rate, demand rate, and rationing rate by rural household quintiles defined using household consump- tion per person from the NSS.8 Results for both India as a whole and Bihar are provided. As expected, demand for work on MGNREGS declines with consumption per person. Richer households are less likely to want to do this work, although there is demand even from the richest quintile in rural areas. Consistent with the incidence of expressed demand, the proportion of households that have obtained job cards declines with consumption per person. But notice that the demand rate is higher than the proportion with job cards; there are many households that expressed demand for work but have not obtained job cards. Strikingly, however, across India as a whole, and for Bihar in particular, the rationing rate also tends to rise with consumption per person. The local-level processes of deciding who gets work from among those who want it mean that poorer households are less likely to be rationed, although the difference is modest. The quintile averages in table 1.3 hide much detail. Figure 1.5 provides a finer representation of the data from the NSS. The top panel illustrates the nonparametric regression function of the house- hold participation rate against consumption per person, with the latter converted into ranks and normalized to be between 0 and 100. Thus, the horizontal axis gives the percentile of the consump- tion distribution.9 The lower panel illustrates the rationing rate. (The demand rate exhibits a similar pattern to the top panel, so is not shown separately.) Both panels show the regression functions adding state dummy variables to control for state effects.10 The participation rate declines rather slowly until about the 50th percentile of the rural distribution. In fact, no decline in participation between the 30th and 40th percentile, in the neighbor- hood of the national poverty rate, can be discerned; households just below the poverty line are no more likely to participate in MGNREGS than those just above the line. The marked decline in participation 42 Table 1.3 Coverage of MGNREGS across Consumption Quintiles, 2009/10 Mean person days Mean person days Participation Demand Rationing Share of households among participating among all rural Quintiles rate rate rate with job cards households households All India Q1 (Poorest) 0.344 0.599 0.426 0.465 33.7 11.3 Q2 0.305 0.528 0.423 0.414 36.2 10.7 Q3 0.280 0.493 0.432 0.385 38.3 10.4 Q4 0.233 0.417 0.441 0.329 40.0 9.0 Q5 (Richest) 0.142 0.289 0.509 0.218 39.7 5.5 All 0.249 0.447 0.444 0.347 37.4 9.0 Bihar Q1 (Poorest) 0.142 0.524 0.728 0.256 21.5 2.9 Q2 0.131 0.526 0.751 0.216 29.4 3.7 Q3 0.125 0.511 0.754 0.206 19.5 2.4 Q4 0.086 0.488 0.824 0.162 25.4 2.1 Q5 (Richest) 0.049 0.331 0.853 0.020 28.9 1.3 All 0.099 0.461 0.785 0.172 24.5 2.3 Source: Estimates from the National Sample Survey (2009/10). Note: The participation rate is the share of rural households working on MGNREGS. The demand rate is the share of rural households that want work on the program. The rationing rate is the share of households who wanted work but did not get it. Households with missing values (that did not respond to the question on whether they got, sought, or did not want work on MGNREGS) are excluded from the sample when participation, demand, and rationing rates are estimated. MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 43 Figure 1.5 Participation and Rationing by Consumption per Person, Rural India (proportion of population participating) a. Participation rate 0.4 participation rate in MGNREGS 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 20 40 60 80 100 percentile ranked by consumption per person (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) b. Rationing rate 0.7 rationing rate on MGNREGS (share of those wanting work who did not get it) 0.6 0.5 0.4 0 20 40 60 80 100 percentile ranked by consumption per person (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) LOWESS PLREG with state controls Source: Estimates from Schedule 10.0 of the National Sample Survey (2009/10). Note: LOWESS = locally weighted smoothed scatter plot; MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme; PLREG = partial linear regression. rates does not emerge until the upper half of the rural consumption distribution. By the 90th percentile, the participation rate reaches about 10 percent. Although far fewer “rich” rural households participate, some do. This phenomenon could reflect recent shocks, or poor individuals within generally well-off households. 44 RIGHT TO WORK? The rationing rate follows a U-shape, declining initially as consumption increases until about the median, but then rising. However, this path clearly stems from the high rationing rates in most poor states demonstrated above. Thus, when we add state fixed effects, a steady increase in the rationing rate emerges as con- sumption increases across the whole distribution (the lower panel of figure 1.5). The greater unmet demand observed in poorer states is clearly not because the rationing process within states is biased against the poor. As emphasized, the more plausible interpretation is that implementation capacity is weaker in poorer states. The lower rationing rate for the poor does not, however, imply that more rationing would improve targeting. What the numbers in table 1.3 and the lower panel of figure 1.5 reflect is the ration- ing process at a given level of participation. When the participation rate rises as a result of a reduction in rationing, the self-targeting mechanism will start to play a bigger role. We will see evidence of this when we compare targeting performance across states with very different participation rates. Also notice that, among participants, the days of work received shows a slightly positive gradient with consumption per person. The pro-poor targeting is achieved through both demand for work and the rationing of work, not by the amount of work actually received. It is of interest to compare targeting performance across states. Many measures of targeting performance in the literature might be used for this purpose. Ravallion (2009) surveys the various measures and tests their performance in predicting the impacts on poverty of a large antipoverty program in China, called the Di Bao program. (This program provides cash transfers targeted to those with income below the locally determined Di Bao poverty lines.) Among all stan- dard targeting measures, the one that performed the best (and by a wide margin) in predicting the program’s impact on poverty was the “targeting differential” (TD). The TD better reflects differences in coverage, that is, the proportion of the poor receiving the program, than do other standard measures, which focus more on how well the scheme avoids leakage—the proportion of the nonpoor receiving the program. In the present context, the TD can be defined as the difference between the MGNREGS participation rate for the poor and that for the nonpoor. To interpret the TD, note that when only the poor get help from the program and all of them are covered, TD = 1, which is the measure’s upper bound; when only the nonpoor get the program and all of them do, TD = −1, its lower bound. This measure is easy to interpret, and it automatically reflects both leakage to the nonpoor and coverage of the poor. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 45 Table 1.4 gives the TD and participation rates for the poor and nonpoor. Participation rates among the poor vary enormously across states, from a low of 0.10 in Maharashtra to a high of 0.73 in Rajasthan. They also vary among the nonpoor. Although par- ticipation rates are always higher for the poor, the gap with that for the nonpoor is not large. The targeting differential for India as a whole is 0.12. (The TD for China’s Di Bao program was 0.27.) Madhya Pradesh has the highest TD, at 0.22, while Kerala has the lowest, at 0.01. Table 1.4 also gives the rationing rates for the poor and nonpoor. Consistent with the all-India results in table 1.3, the nonpoor are rationed more than the poor in almost all states (the only exceptions are Kerala and Rajasthan). The TD in equation (1.4) is determined by how the demand rates and the rationing rates vary between the poor and nonpoor. A sim- ple decomposition method can be used to show how much of the targeting differential for state i is due to each factor: TDi = Pi poor Pinonpoor = (1 − R)(Dipoor − Dinonpoor ) − D(Ripoor Rinonpoor ) residual. (1.4) The bars above the variables in equation (1.4) denote fixed reference values, while Pk, Dk, and Rk are the participation rates, demand rates, and rationing rates, respectively, for k = poor, nonpoor. TD can thus be interpreted as the “self-targeting effect” (greater demand for work among the poor—the first term on the right-hand side of equation 1.4) net of the rationing effect (the extent to which the poor might be rationed more—the second term). (Because the decomposi- tion is not exact—given the nonlinearity in equation (1.1)—there is also a residual.) Applying this decomposition, and using the all-India values for the reference, we find that 85.6 percent of the national TD is attributable to the difference in demand between the poor and nonpoor while 13.7 percent is due to the difference in rationing rates. (The residual is negligible.) There are differences across states, though the demand effect dominates in 17 of the 20 states. So, despite rationing, the bulk of the pro-poor targeting is coming through the self-targeting mechanism. Targeting performance is better in states with higher overall participation rates. Figure 1.6 plots the two participation rates from table 1.4 against the overall participation rate (table 1.1). 46 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 1.4 Targeting Performance of MGNREGS across States Rationing Participation Participation Rationing rate rate for the rate for the Targeting rate for for the State poor nonpoor differential the poor nonpoor Andhra Pradesh 0.513 0.322 0.191 0.215 0.259 Assam 0.233 0.149 0.085 0.523 0.590 Bihar 0.127 0.075 0.052 0.756 0.816 Chhattisgarh 0.571 0.386 0.186 0.260 0.366 Gujarat 0.298 0.185 0.114 0.319 0.490 Haryana 0.106 0.037 0.069 0.701 0.760 Himachal Pradesh 0.510 0.318 0.192 0.173 0.206 Jharkhand 0.237 0.163 0.075 0.613 0.641 Karnataka 0.126 0.065 0.061 0.503 0.703 Kerala 0.116 0.112 0.005 0.535 0.516 Madhya Pradesh 0.534 0.319 0.215 0.297 0.438 Maharashtra 0.096 0.025 0.071 0.738 0.898 Orissa 0.317 0.135 0.182 0.509 0.650 Punjab 0.145 0.035 0.110 0.729 0.872 Rajasthan 0.728 0.579 0.149 0.166 0.150 Tamil Nadu 0.484 0.302 0.182 0.093 0.219 Uttar Pradesh 0.242 0.120 0.122 0.483 0.582 West Bengal 0.559 0.379 0.179 0.282 0.376 All India 0.325 0.210 0.115 0.428 0.463 Source: Calculations from the National Sample Survey (2009/10). Note: Households are classified as poor or nonpoor based on poverty lines for the National Sample Survey Schedule 10.0 that would yield the same state-specific poverty rates as estimated from the National Sample Survey Schedule 1.0, and reported in table 1.1. All-India figures reported in this table include only the states shown. MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. The TD—the gap between the two lines—rises with the overall par- ticipation rate, and the two are strongly correlated (r = 0.748). Targeting performance also tends to be worse in the states with higher levels of rationing (the correlation between TD and ration- ing rate is −0.71). However, this arises because (as already seen) overall participation rates are low in states with higher degrees of rationing. Once the participation rate is controlled for, there is no significant partial correlation between the TD and the rationing rate (the t-statistic is −0.611).11 INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 47 So we find that targeting performance tends to improve with higher overall participation rates, which also tend to come with lower rationing rates. The fact that targeting performance improves as the program expands makes this an example of what Lanjouw and Ravallion (1999) call “early capture” by the nonpoor, which they show to be a common feature of access to safety nets and schooling in India (using data for the 1990s). 12 Lanjouw and Ravallion (1999) also show in a theoretical model of the political economy of targeted programs that for programs with relatively large start-up costs, early capture by the nonpoor may be the only politically feasible option (especially when the start-up costs must be financed domestically). So this feature of MGNREGS is possibly not surprising. Targeting by social groups (castes and tribes) is another dimension of interest in India. Qualitative studies have suggested that Sched- uled Castes (SCs), Scheduled Tribes (STs), and women—groups that have traditionally been excluded—have benefited disproportion- ately from the scheme (Drèze and Khera 2011). We shall return to discuss participation by women. The focus here is on the scheme’s performance in reaching ST, SC, and Other Backward Class (OBC) households. Figure 1.6 Targeting Performance Rises with the Overall Participation Rate across States 0.8 Poor participation rate for poor and nonpoor 0.7 0.6 Nonpoor 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 overall participation rate Source: Estimates from Schedule 10.0 of the National Sample Survey (2009/10). 48 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 1.5 gives the participation rates by these groupings. Nationally, 42 percent and 34 percent of rural ST and SC house- holds, respectively, participated. Participation was lower for OBCs at 21 percent, and lowest for all others at 16 percent. But there is a wide range across states. For STs, the range is from 6 percent of households in Maharashtra to 82 percent in Rajasthan, whereas for SC households it is from 2 percent to 65 percent, and for the same states. Table 1.5 also reports the targeting differential for STs, SCs, and OBCs together, defined as their weighted average participation rate less the participation rate for “others.” This “caste TD” varies from −0.02 in Assam to 0.29 in Chhattisgarh, with a national mean of 0.12, almost identical to the national “poverty TD” in table 1.4. As with the poverty TD, the caste TD is positively correlated with overall participation rates (r = 0.723). This correlation is also evi- dent in figure 1.7, which plots participation rates against the overall participation rates across states. The participation rates for STs, SCs, and OBCs rise faster than that for “others” as the overall participa- tion rate rises, suggesting that the targeting of disadvantaged castes improves with program expansion. Wages and Rationing on MGNREGS A number of concerns about the stipulated wage rates for the pro- gram have arisen. On the one hand, it has been argued that setting scheme wages below the state-mandated rates under the Minimum Wages Act is a violation of the law and tantamount to “forced labor,” a stand that was upheld by the Supreme Court in January 2012.13 On the other hand, concerns have been raised that the wage rate on MGNREGS is being set too high relative to actual casual labor market wages. The concern is that the scheme will divert workers from market work and so bid up the market wage rate.14 (Supporters of the scheme usually count this as a benefit.) What does the evidence suggest? Table 1.6 reports average wage rates from the administrative data. These are calculated as total MGNREGS spending on unskilled labor divided by total person days of employment provided.15 The table also reports estimates for average wages in private casual labor from the NSS for the same year.16 The MGNREGS wage rate is not well above the market wage rate everywhere. Indeed, for India as a whole the two wages are quite close. If rural India were a single labor market, it could be conjec- tured that the scheme has brought the two wage rates into parity. However, rural India is not one labor market because mobility is Table 1.5 Participation Rates and Targeting by Social Group Participation rates Scheduled Scheduled Castes Other Backward Weighted mean for Targeting State Tribes (STs) (SCs) Classes (OBCs) STs, SCs, and OBCs Others differentiala Andhra Pradesh 0.567 0.434 0.382 0.412 0.150 0.262 Assam 0.192 0.179 0.163 0.174 0.191 −0.017 Bihar 0.087b 0.185 0.089 0.116 0.016 0.100 Chhattisgarh 0.519 0.435 0.504 0.500 0.214 0.286 Gujarat 0.340 0.289 0.180 0.252 0.070 0.181 Haryana 0.000b 0.105 0.044 0.071 0.018 0.054 Himachal Pradesh 0.392 0.413 0.294 0.376 0.298 0.077 Jammu and Kashmir 0.054b 0.134 0.109 0.114 0.090 0.024 Jharkhand 0.204 0.268 0.155 0.197 0.149 0.048 Karnataka 0.186 0.160 0.042 0.089 0.054 0.035 Kerala 0.168b 0.238 0.098 0.123 0.088 0.035 (Continued on the following page) 49 50 Table 1.5 (Continued) Participation rates Scheduled Scheduled Castes Other Backward Weighted mean for Targeting State Tribes (STs) (SCs) Classes (OBCs) STs, SCs, and OBCs Others differentiala Madhya Pradesh 0.567 0.442 0.334 0.433 0.211 0.222 Maharashtra 0.442 0.017 0.074 0.058 0.015 0.044 Orissa 0.334 0.220 0.224 0.253 0.100 0.153 Punjab 0.433 0.104 0.016 0.082 0.009 0.074 Rajasthan 0.211 0.654 0.581 0.644 0.444 0.200 Tamil Nadu 0.222 0.523 0.279 0.338 0.069 0.269 Uttar Pradesh 0.140b 0.325 0.118 0.191 0.044 0.146 Uttarakhand 0.388 0.513 0.082 0.321 0.278 0.043 West Bengal 0.656 0.507 0.449 0.521 0.362 0.159 All India 0.415 0.336 0.214 0.279 0.155 0.124 Source: Calculations from the National Sample Survey (2009/10). Note: All-India figures include states not shown. a. Targeting differential is the difference between the weighted mean participation rate of STs, SCs, and OBCs and that for others. b. ST figures were from fewer than 100 sampled households and may be unreliable. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 51 Figure 1.7 Participation Rates for Scheduled Tribes, Scheduled Castes, and Other Backward Classes Rise Faster Than That for “Other” Castes as the Overall Participation Rate Increases across States 0.9 Scheduled Scheduled Tribe Caste 0.8 participation rate for each group 0.7 Other Backward 0.6 Classes 0.5 O Other 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 overall participation rate Scheduled Tribe Scheduled Caste Other Backward Classes Other Source: Estimates from Schedule 10.0 of the National Sample Survey (2009/10). imperfect. In half of the states, the MGNREGS wage rate in 2009/10 was actually lower than the average wage rate for casual labor. Given the extent of rationing in a number of states (including most of the poorest half), it seems implausible that the scheme would be having a large impact on wages for other casual work in those states, let alone resulting in a higher casual wage than for MGNREGS. For example, with only 17 percent of those who wanted work on the scheme in Punjab getting that work, the casual (non-public-works [non-PW]) wage rate being greater than the MGNREGS wage rate is not likely to be due to competition for workers. The relative wage—the mean wage rate for casual non-PW labor divided by the MGNREGS wage—does tend to be lower in states with higher levels of unmet demand. Let Wi /WiEGS be the relative wage in state i, where Wi is the wage rate in the non-PW casual labor market and WiEGS is the MGNREGS wage rate. The corre- lation coefficient between ln(Wi /WiEGS) and unmet demand (Ui) is –0.558, which is significant at the 1 percent level.17 However, there 52 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 1.6 Average Wages on MGNREGS and in Casual Labor, 2009/10 Average Average casual wage rate wage rate on (rupees/day) MGNREGS State (rupees/day) Overall Male Female Andhra Pradesh 91.9 98.5 115.4 75.7 Assam 87.0 90.1 94.4 74.9 Bihar 97.5 79.4 81.0 65.8 Chhattisgarh 82.3 68.8 70.8 65.5 Gujarat 89.3 83.3 87.3 71.0 Haryana 150.9 139.6 146.1 99.1 Himachal Pradesh 109.5 139.6 141.4 110.2 Jammu and Kashmir 93.3 158.3 157.5 — Jharkhand 97.7 101.2 103.6 82.2 Karnataka 86.0 84.5 96.9 62.8 Kerala 120.6 206.5 226.6 119.3 Madhya Pradesh 83.7 69.0 74.5 58.1 Maharashtra 94.3 75.2 86.0 58.2 Orissa 105.9 75.6 81.0 59.1 Punjab 123.5 130.4 133.5 91.8 Rajasthan 87.4 125.7 132.3 94.3 Tamil Nadu 71.6 110.8 132.1 72.6 Uttar Pradesh 99.5 94.3 97.0 69.2 Uttarakhand 99.0 118.7 122.1 96.7 West Bengal 90.4 85.3 87.8 65.9 All India 90.2 93.1 101.5 68.9 Sources: Casual wages from Key Indicators of Employment and Unemployment in India, 2009/10, National Sample Survey Organization, government of India (June 2011). MGNREGS expenditure and employment data are from the state-wise Monthly Progress Reports available at www.nrega.nic.in. Note: MGNREGS wage rates estimated as total expenditure on wages for unskilled labor divided by total number of person days of employment for fiscal year 2009/10 (April 2009 to March 2010). Casual wages for June 2009 to July 2010 period are based on the National Sample Survey 66th round. “All India” includes smaller states not reported. Female wage rate for Jammu and Kashmir not reported on account of small sample (seven observations). MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme; — = not available. are reasons to question whether this really reflects greater tighten- ing of the casual labor market in states where there is less unmet demand for work on the scheme. The implied relative wage rate at zero rationing seems too high to be believed. To see why, postulate that the relative wage depends on the excess demand as follows:18 ln(Wi /WiEGS) = α + β(Di − Pi) + εi. (1.5) INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 53 The expected value of the log relative wage rate when all demand for work on MGNREGS has been satisfied is then given by α. Using the data in tables 1.1 and 1.6, the estimated (least squares) value of α is 0.398 (standard error = 0.105) and the estimate of β is –1.777 (standard error = 0.519; R2 = 0.311). These results imply that, when all demand for work is satisfied, the market wage rate would be 50 percent higher than the MGNREGS wage rate.19 Yet the work is very similar, and there is no obvious reason why such a differential would exist in equilibrium. The incidence of rationing across states could be picking up some other factor correlated with it. Following the earlier discussion, poverty is a plausible candidate. Adding the poverty rate to equation (1.5), the effect of unmet demand becomes insignificant (probability = 0.19) whereas the poverty rate is signifi- cant (a coefficient of 0.828, with standard error of 0.333). A higher poverty rate may be associated with greater landlessness and hence a larger supply of casual labor, bringing down the wage rate. So the argument that these data suggest a causal effect on relative wages of greater competition between the scheme and the casual labor market in India’s poorer states is not persuasive. We return to this issue for Bihar in chapter 4. Participation by Women Nationally, almost half (48 percent) of the employment registered in the administrative data for 2009/10 was for women.20 This share is very high for a country in which a minority of women participate in the paid labor force; for example, it is about twice their share of other (non-PW) casual wage work.21 The variation across states is striking; between the two extremes, only 7 percent of the work goes to women in Jammu and Kashmir as compared with 88 percent in Kerala (table 1.1). The female share on MGNREGS work is greater than their share of the work in the casual wage labor market in all states, but the gap tends to be larger in states in which women par- ticipate less in the casual labor market (figure 1.8). In this respect also, poorer states are different. Women are less likely to participate (relative to men) in MGNREGS in poorer states. Figure 1.9 plots the share of person days of employment going to women against the poverty rate. We see a negative cor- relation (r = −0.47). By contrast, women’s share of casual (non-PW) wage work tends to be slightly higher, on average, in poorer states, although the difference is not statistically significant (r = 0.09). Why is less of the available work going to women in poorer states? The NSS does not allow rationing at the individual level to be identified 54 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 1.8 Women Get a Larger Share of MGNREGS Work Than of Casual Wage Labor across States 100 r = 0.45 Kerala female share of work on Mgnregs (%) Tamil Nadu 80 Rajasthan Regression line 60 40 Line of equality 20 Jammu and Kashmir 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 female share of work in the casual labor market (%) Source: Estimates from MGNREGS administrative data and Schedule 10.0 of the National Sample Survey (2009/10). Note: MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. (it is a household variable). However, some clues to how rationing has affected women can be gained from the interstate comparisons. It would seem unlikely that the effect of household poverty on demand for work among women is any different than among men.22 Assum- ing that the effect of being a poorer state on demand for work is the same for men and women, the pattern in figure 1.10 suggests that the rationing process is worse for women in poorer states. Do women have equal access to the scheme when they need it? Again, the NSS data do not provide a direct answer. However, the patterns in the interstate data are suggestive. We observe a negative correlation between the female share of work and the overall ration- ing rate (figure 1.10). It might be conjectured that this negative correlation reflects differences in the extent of poverty. Women may be less aware of their rights and less empowered to demand work in poorer states. For example, when other work is scarce, women may get crowded out by men. However, the negative correlation between the female share of work and the rationing rate persists when we control for the poverty rate, as can be seen in table 1.7, which gives regressions for the female share of employment on MGNREGS INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 55 Figure 1.9 The Share of Work Going to Women Tends to Be Lower in Poorer States 1.0 0.8 Female share of female share of work MGNREGS 0.6 0.4 Female share of non-PW work 0.2 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 headcount index of rural poverty 2009/10 female share of non-PW work female share of MGNREGS Source: Estimates from MGNREGS administrative data and Schedule 10.0 of the National Sample Survey (2009/10). Note: MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme; PW = public works. against both the rationing rate and the poverty rate. This negative correlation between the overall rationing rate and the share of work going to women implies that women are more likely to be rationed out of work than are men. Chapter 2 directly measures rationing at the individual level in Bihar, using the specially designed survey. That chapter provides direct evidence that the rationing rate is higher for women than for men in Bihar. Gender differences in the opportunities available in the casual labor market can also be expected to influence demand for work. We find that the female market wage rate has a significant negative effect on women’s share of the work provided, whereas the male wage rate has the opposite effect (table 1.7).23 This outcome suggests that there is an intrahousehold substitution effect; for example, when casual labor market opportunities are good for men but bad for women, women find it easier to get the (limited) number of jobs available 56 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 1.10 The Share of Work Going to Women Tends to Be Lower in States with Higher Rationing female share of person days of employment (%) 100 r = –0.58 Kerala 80 Tamil Nadu 60 40 Bihar 20 Jammu and Kashmir 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 rationing rate (share of those who wanted work but did not get it) Source: Estimates from Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) administrative data and Schedule 10.0 of the National Sample Survey (2009/10). on the scheme.24 The wage effect is strong statistically, and greatly increases the explanatory power.25 The negative effect of rationing on women’s access to the scheme also persists when we control for differences in the wages received for private (non-PW) casual work. The final column gives the pre- ferred regression in which the share of MGNREGS work going to women depends on the overall rationing rate—implying that women are more rationed than men—and the female market wage relative to the male wage. Conclusion Demand for work on MGNREGS tends to be higher in poorer states. This higher demand appears to reflect the scheme’s built-in “self-tar- geting” mechanism, whereby nonpoor people find work on the scheme less attractive than do poor people. However, actual participation rates in the scheme are not, as a rule, any higher in poorer states, where it is needed the most. The reason for this paradox lies in the differences in the extent to which the employment guarantee is honored. The answer INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 57 Table 1.7 Regression Results for Female Share of Employment in MGNREGS Sample with Sample with male Full headcount index and female wages sample available available Constant 0.676 0.829 0.193 0.131 0.697 (8.671) (5.341) (0.887) (0.246) (3.922) Rationing rate −0.505 −0.419 −0.307 −0.456 −0.469 (−3.758) (−2.898) (−2.904) (−5.108) (−5.972) Headcount index of −0.515 0.241 rural poverty (−1.538) (1.518) Female casual non-PW wage −0.549 −0.744 (log) (−2.056) (−3.475) Male casual non-PW 0.675 0.806 wage (log) (5.156) (3.556) Female wage relative to male −0.836 wage (log) (−3.301) R2 0.336 0.467 0.811 0.692 0.687 Standard error of estimate 0.164 0.145 0.093 0.111 0.108 Number of observations 20 18 18 19 19 Source: Estimates from National Sample Survey 2009/10 data. Note: The dependent variable is the share of total person days of employment on MGNREGS going to women. The rationing rate is the share of households who wanted work but did not get it. The headcount index is the percentage of popula- tion below the poverty line. The t-ratios in parentheses are based on White standard errors. MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme; PW = public works. to the question posed in the title of this chapter is clearly “no.” Ration- ing is common, but far more so in some of the poorest states. We do not find that the local-level processes determining who gets work among those who want it are generally skewed against the poor. There are sure to be places where this is happening (and qualitative field reports have provided examples), but it does not appear to stand up as a generalization. We do find evidence that the poor fare somewhat less well when it comes to the total number of days of work they manage to get on the scheme. However, despite the pervasive rationing, it is plain that the scheme is still reach- ing poor people and also reaching the Scheduled Tribes, Scheduled Castes, and Other Backward Classes. Participation rates on the scheme are higher for poor people than for others. This finding holds at the official poverty line, but the 58 RIGHT TO WORK? scheme is also reaching many families just above the official line. It is only at relatively high consumption levels that participation drops off sharply. This participation of people above the poverty line should not be interpreted as indicating that well-off families in rural India are turning to MGNREGS. There may be shocks that are not evident in the household consumption aggregates, and there may be individual needs for help that are not evident in those aggregates. Targeting performance varies across states. The overall participa- tion rate seems to be an important factor in accounting for these inter- state differences, with the scheme being more pro-poor and reaching Scheduled Tribes, Scheduled Castes, and Other Backward Classes more effectively in states with higher overall participation rates. Although the allocation of work through the local-level rationing process is not working against the poor, there are clearly many poor people who are not getting help because the employment guarantee is not in operation almost anywhere (Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Tamil Nadu could be the exceptions, where 80 percent or more of those who want work got it). And other potential benefits of the scheme, notably the empowerment gains and the insurance benefits, are almost certainly undermined by the extensive rationing. The first-order problem for MGNREGS is the level of unmet demand. The scheme is popular with women—their participation rate is double their participation rate in the casual labor market—but the rationing process does not appear to be favoring them. We also find evidence of a strong effect of relative male-to-female market wages on women’s participation. As one would expect, poor fami- lies appear to choose whether it is the man or the woman who goes to the scheme according to relative wages. It has been claimed by some observers that the scheme is driving up wages for other work, such as in agriculture; some observers see this as a good thing, others not. For India as a whole, we find that the scheme’s average wage rate was roughly in line with the casual labor market in 2009/10. This equivalence might look like a com- petitive labor market equilibrium, but that view is hard to reconcile with the extensive rationing we find. It is interesting that we do find a significant negative correlation between the extent of rationing and the wage rate in the casual labor market relative to the wage rate on the scheme. Although this is suggestive, on closer inspection we are more inclined to think that other economic factors are at work. Indeed, the correlation largely vanishes when we control for the level of poverty. Poorer states tend to see both more rationing of work on the scheme and lower casual wages—possibly as the result of a greater supply of labor given the extent of rural landlessness. INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 59 Notes 1. There is also evidence that the scheme’s targeting performance deteriorated when the wage rate rose substantially (Gaiha 1997). 2. See government of India website for MGNREGS (http://nrega.nic .in). 3. Note that Bihar’s participation rate of 10 percent in table 1.1 is well below the 26 percent implied by the administrative data reported in table O.1. We turn to the issue of discrepancy between survey aggregates and administrative data in chapter 4. 4. The standard error of the predicted value for Bihar is 1.9 percent, so the 95 percent confidence interval is from 23 percent to 30 percent. 5. Note that this third reason for the direct effect of poverty is not consistent with a model of public decision making based on standard utili- tarian calculus, for then one would expect the policy weight on accommo- dating the demand for work to be higher in states with a higher share of poor people who need that work more than do the nonpoor. 6. Dutta and others (2012) provide a “structural model” of participa- tion rates as a function of demand rates and poverty incidence, also suggest- ing that states with higher poverty incidence tend to have greater unmet demand for work on the scheme. 7. Jha and others (2009) report evidence that households with larger landholdings were more likely to participate in the scheme in Andhra Pradesh (AP), though they find evidence of better targeting in Rajasthan. They conclude that the scheme is being “captured” by the nonpoor in AP. Note, however, that their regressions control for other variables that may capture poverty, includ- ing occupation and whether the household has a Below-Poverty-Line (BPL) card. The full regressions are not presented in their paper, but it may be that, for example, having a BPL card is already capturing the pro-poor targeting of MGNREGS, but that the BPL card puts too high a weight on landlessness from the point of view of explaining participation. Then the amount of land may appear to have the wrong sign, even though the scheme is targeting the poor. By contrast, the results of Liu and Deininger (2013) suggest quite pro-poor targeting of MGNREGS in AP. Shariff (2009) reports participation regres- sions for MGNREGS in selected backward districts of northern states (includ- ing some districts in Bihar). Some of the regression coefficients also suggest perverse targeting. Shariff is careful in interpreting the results though the same inferential concerns hold as for the study by Jha and others (2009). 8. Household quintiles were drawn after correcting per capita con- sumption for cost-of-living differences across states using the price deflators implicit in the Tendulkar poverty lines. 9. Alternatively, one can just use, for example, log consumption per person. However, given the uneven spread of the data across levels of 60 RIGHT TO WORK? consumption, this can be deceptive at the tails. Using percentiles instead ensures a uniform distribution of the data. 10. The curve without controls is based on a locally weighted smoothed scatter plot (LOWESS). The curve with state controls is fitted using a partial linear regression model procedure described in Lokshin (2006). 11. The TD is also positively correlated with the demand rate (r = 0.671), but this too vanishes when one controls for the participation rate (the t-statistic for the partial correlation coefficient is 0.151). 12. Lanjouw and Ravallion (1999) study public works programs, the Integrated Rural Development Program, the Public Distribution System, and school enrollment. 13. The Supreme Court has refused to stay a September 2011 Karnataka High Court verdict that affirms that the central government is liable for paying wages in tandem with the states’ minimum wage rates. 14. Evidence for the impact of the scheme on raising market wages is reported by Imbert and Papp (2012) who compare districts that started early on the scheme with those that started later. However, they do not examine the extent of rationing. 15. The scheme stipulates both piece rates and daily rates. Under the piece rate, whether a given worker can earn the mandated wage rate depends on her work effort. If the scheme attracts workers with lower-than-average physical ability, the realized average wage rate by our calculations can fall short of the mandated wage. 16. Note that the reference periods for MGNREGS and casual market wages reported in the table are slightly different. 17. The fit is slightly better using the log relative wage; using Wi /WiEGS instead, the correlation coefficient is −0.520. 18. Using Wi /WiEGS as the dependent variable, the estimated intercept is 1.466 (standard error = 0.132). Given the uncertainty about the true func- tional form, we also tried a quadratic function of excess demand but it did not improve the fit. 19. Note that exp (0.398) = 1.489 is the implied ratio of the levels of wages. 20. Although the administrative data are inadequate for measuring aggregate demand for work, there is no obvious reason to question their veracity for measuring the gender composition of the work provided. 21. We estimate that the share of women in the total person days of casual labor in 2009/10 was 23.3 percent, based on the 2009/10 NSS. 22. Alternatively, the point could be made that men may be more likely to be unemployed in poorer households and that the effect of household poverty on demand for MGNREGS work may be different for men and women. 23. We tested an encompassing specification in which the log of the male wage rate, log of the female wage rate, and log of the MGNREGS wage rates entered separately. The homogeneity restriction that the sum of the INDIA’S EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME 61 coefficients equals zero could not be rejected (F(1,14) = 0.41; probability = 0.53), but nor could we reject the null that it was the log of the female wage relative to the male wage that mattered, with the MGNREGS wage having no effect (F = 1.49; probability = 0.26). Also, the MGNREGS wage rate on its own was not significant. So we opted for a specification in which the log of the relative wage is the regressor as in table 1.7. Table 1.7 also gives a specification with male and female wages entering separately. 24. A similar result was found by Datt and Ravallion (1994) in studying time allocation within households in response to the availability of work under Maharashtra’s Employment Guarantee Scheme. 25. We also tested for an effect of the female share of other (non-PW) casual labor. This is endogenous but it allows us to control for local social norms that influence the propensity for women to do any casual wage labor. The new variable was not, however, significant, and the coefficients on the other variables were affected little. References Datt, Gaurav, and Martin Ravallion. 1994. “Transfer Benefits from Public Works Employment.” Economic Journal l 104: 1346–69. Drèze, Jean, and Reetika Khera. 2011. “Employment Guarantee and the Right to Work.” In The Battle for Employment Guarantee, edited by Reetika Khera. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. Dutta, Puja, Rinku Murgai, Martin Ravallion, and Dominique van de Walle. 2012. “Does India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme Guarantee Employment?” Economic and Political Weekly 48 (21): 55–64. Gaiha, Raghav. 1997. “Rural Public Works and the Poor: The Case of the Employment Guarantee Scheme in India.” In Research in Labour Economics, edited by S. Polachek. Greenwich, Connecticut: JAI Press. Imbert, Clément, and John Papp. 2011. “Estimating Leakages in India’s Employment Guarantee.” In The Battle for Employment Guarantee, edited by Reetika Khera. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. ———. 2012. “Equilibrium Distributional Impacts of Government Employ- ment Programs: Evidence from India’s Employment Guarantee.” Paris School of Economics Working Paper No. 2012-14. Jha, Raghbendra, Sambit Bhattacharyya, Raghav Gaiha, and Shylashri Shankar. 2009. “‘Capture’ of Anti-Poverty Programs: An Analysis of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Program in India.” Journal of Asian Economics 20 (4): 456–64. Khera, Reetika, ed. 2011. The Battle for Employment Guarantee. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. 62 RIGHT TO WORK? Lanjouw, Peter, and Martin Ravallion. 1999. “Benefit Incidence, Public Spending Reforms and the Timing of Program Capture.” World Bank Economic Review 13 (2): 257–73. Liu, Yanyan, and Christopher B. Barrett. 2013. “Heterogeneous Pro-Poor Targeting in the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme.” Economic and Political Weekly 48 (10): 46–53. Liu, Yanyan, and Klaus Deininger. 2013. “Welfare and Poverty Impacts of India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Evidence from Andhra Pradesh.” Policy Research Working Paper No. 6543, World Bank, Washington, DC. Lokshin, Michael. 2006. “Difference-based Semi-parametric Estimation of Partial Linear Regression Models.” Stata Journal 6 (3): 377–83. National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO). 2009/10. “Socio-Economic Survey Sixty-Sixth Round Schedule 10: Employment and Unemploy- ment.” Government of India, New Delhi. Niehaus, Paul, and Sandip Sukhtankar. Forthcoming. “Corruption Dynam- ics: The Golden Goose Effect.” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy. Ravallion, Martin. 2009. “How Relevant Is Targeting to the Success of an Antipoverty Program?” World Bank Research Observer 24 (3): 205–31. ———, Gaurav Datt, and Shubham Chaudhuri. 1993. “Does Maharashtra’s ‘Employment Guarantee Scheme’ Guarantee Employment? Effects of the 1988 Wage Increase.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 41: 251–75. Shariff, Abusaleh. 2009. “Assessment of Outreach and Benefits of National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme in India.” Indian Journal of Labor Economics 52 (2): 243–68. Witsoe, Jeffrey. 2012. “Everyday Corruption and the Political Mediation of the Indian State.” Economic and Political Weekly 47 (6): 47–54. 2 Unmet Demand for Work on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme In this chapter and the next, the survey data collected for Bihar are used to better understand the issues raised in the all-India analysis, including why the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) falls so far short of meeting its promise of guaranteeing employment. Given that BREGS work is in short supply relative to demand, we ask, who gets BREGS jobs, and who is rationed out? Is it the poor who do not get the extra work they want? How do the answers to these questions vary by gender and caste? Does location matter? We first describe the panel household survey, representative of rural Bihar, that was fielded for this study and is the basis of the analysis that follows. The BREGS Survey The BREGS survey collected two rounds of data from 150 villages across Bihar. The first round of the survey was implemented between May and July of 2009 and the second during the same months one year later. Because both surveys included questions with recall periods of one year, we refer to them as covering 2008/09 and 2009/10.1 The first of the survey periods included a time of severe floods during the monsoon (July–August of 2008) in six districts falling in the catchment area of the Kosi River. In contrast, rainfall was scant during the 2009 monsoons and drought was declared in 26 districts.2 63 64 RIGHT TO WORK? A two-stage sampling design was followed, using the 2001 census list of villages as the sampling frame. In the first stage, 150 villages were randomly selected from two strata, classified by high and low BREGS coverage based on administrative data for the scheme for 2008/09. In the second stage, 20 households per village were randomly selected, drawing from three strata (proportions in parentheses)—those with at least one member who had been employed at public works in the past year (7 of 20), those with a member who had engaged in other (non-public-works) casual work (7 of 20), and all other households (6 of 20). This stratified approach ensured that the sample included both scheme participants and households with likely participants to ensure that we could compare their activities and outcomes, and assess the degree of demand and rationing. All results reported in the study are weighted with appropriate sample weights to reflect the sampling design and are representative for the state. The annex to this chapter describes the survey instruments and sampling design in more detail and provides definitions of key variables used in the analysis. Data were collected through several survey instruments to bring together evidence on both the demand- and supply-side aspects of the scheme: • Household surveys. These surveys collected information on a range of household-level characteristics, including demographics, socioeconomic status (including asset ownership and consump- tion), employment and wages, political participation and social networks, as well as information on BREGS participation and process-related issues. To collect information on consumption, the abridged consumption block of the Employment Schedules of the National Sample Survey was used. • Individual surveys. Two individual household members (one male and one female) were also interviewed for information on indi- vidual participation in BREGS; experience of BREGS functioning at the most recent worksite; and perceptions of the program, the village labor market, the role of women, and so forth. • Village surveys. In each village, key informants were interviewed to collect information on the physical and social infrastructure in the village and on access to government programs. • Gram Panchayat surveys. A survey of Gram Panchayats (GPs), in which the sampled households lived, focused on the administra- tive capabilities of GPs as well as perceptions of implementation challenges by program functionaries (such as the panchayat rozgar sewak3 and the Mukhiya) to generate insights into the institutional factors at the local level that contribute to program implementation and outcomes. UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 65 • Block surveys. This survey instrument collected basic informa- tion from block officials on the capabilities and perceptions of imple- mentation challenges at the block level. Whereas the household and individual questionnaires provided insights on program performance, the village, GP, and block ques- tionnaires helped identify supply-side constraints on delivery. This information was supplemented by the following qualitative research: (1) detailed process assessments in purposively selected villages in six districts in north and south Bihar (Gaya, Khaimur, Kishanganj, Muzaffarpur, Purnea, and Saharsa) during February and August 2009;4 and (2) in-depth case studies of the delivery mechanisms adopted in Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Rajasthan.5 A pilot information campaign was conducted between the two survey rounds in February and March 2010 in 40 villages randomly selected from the BREGS sample. The campaign took the form of a movie on BREGS rights and entitlements, tailored to Bihar’s specific context and program guidelines. We return to this in chapter 7. In total, 3,000 households and approximately 5,000 individuals were interviewed in each of the two rounds. The panel comprises 2,728 households and 3,749 individuals. Table 2.1 summarizes the sample size in the two rounds. In the analysis that follows, the panel is used only when it is needed. In each case, the most observations possible are used, with the appropriate sample always determined by the question asked. The overall attrition rate for households of 8 percent between the two rounds was not concentrated in any particular stratum. There were relatively few refusals; two-thirds of the attrition occurred because a household was away temporarily when the survey team visited the village during the second round. There is no significant attrition effect for household-level BREGS participation or when estimating the impacts of the pilot information campaign (see the annex to this chapter). Table 2.1 Sample Sizes in Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Survey R1 R2 Panel (R1, R2) Households 3,000 3,000 2,728 Individuals 5,172 5,012 3,749 Males 2,399 2,230 1,586 Females 2,773 2,782 2,163 Note: R1 and R2 refer to rounds 1 and 2, respectively, of the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. 66 RIGHT TO WORK? The questionnaire asked both surveyed households and individu- als whether they engaged in casual work on “public works” (which could include BREGS, road-building programs, or other government public works schemes) and then whether this was BREGS work. In round 1 (R1), 14.4 percent of households and 12.6 percent of individuals who said they were employed in public works stated that they did not participate in BREGS. The equivalent percentages for round 2 (R2) were 16 percent and 11.8 percent of households and individuals, respectively. Some proportion of this work possibly really was BREGS although participants were not aware of it; how- ever, we cannot be sure. For this reason, we will sometimes refer to public works and sometimes to BREGS in accordance with the terms used in the specific question being examined. To estimate poverty measures for Bihar, we use the median per capita consumption level in R1 to delineate the poverty line and then update it using the consumer price index for agricultural labor- ers to get the R2 poverty line. This method yields poverty lines of 6,988 rupees (Rs) per person per year in R1 and Rs 7,836 in R2. The R1 poverty rate in Bihar is then 50 percent (by construction) and in R2, it is estimated to be 41.8 percent. Performance in Meeting Demand for Work As in the all-India results reported in the previous chapter, the participation rate, demand rate, and rationing rate are estimated for rural households in Bihar using the BREGS survey. Although we use the same concepts and definitions, three differences should be noted between estimates based on the National Sample Survey (NSS) and the BREGS survey. First, we expect to find differences in the estimates as the result of differences in how this information is captured through the two surveys. The NSS 66th round (Sched- ule 10.0) used in the cross-state analysis asks a single question on whether the household got work on the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) in the past year; this question is used to classify households into participants, excess demanders (those who wanted work but did not get it), and the rest. In contrast, the BREGS survey has two sources of infor- mation on participation: first, the household questionnaire has a module on BREGS participation (including the total number of days worked in the past year) for each household member; and second, the individual questionnaires have a detailed module on each episode of BREGS (and other public works) work for the two household members interviewed, one male and one female. These individuals UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 67 were also asked whether they had wanted to work on BREGS in the past year but did not get work. We believe that a specialized survey with detailed questions on MGNREGS is more likely to capture this information than a single question in a general survey. This is particularly likely to be the case if awareness is low and the main household respondent is not entirely aware of the activities of other members. Second, the specialized individual questionnaires in the BREGS survey make it possible for us to estimate demand, participation, and rationing separately for men and women in each survey round. Third, using the BREGS survey, we can extend the demand analysis to also assess which participating households may be rationed with respect to days of work by asking if they received fewer days of employment than they desired. (Annex table 2A.3 pro- vides a summary of the participation and excess demander variable definitions and their source at the individual and household levels in the BREGS survey.) Table 2.2 reports the demand rate, participation rate, and ration- ing rate for households, and separately for men and women. Similar to results reported for Bihar in the previous chapter, the BREGS survey also indicates the presence of massive demand for BREGS employment in rural Bihar among both men and women; indeed, estimated demand for the scheme is higher when we use data from the BREGS survey, which, as noted, collected much more detailed information on program participation and demand than did the NSS questionnaire. In both rounds of the survey, nearly two-thirds Table 2.2 Summary of Participation, Demand, and Rationing Households Men Women Round Round Round Round Round Round 1 2 1 2 1 2 Participation rate (percent) 22.4 17.6 23.6 16.8 5.7 6.8 Demand rate (percent) 65.5 64.4 68.1 64.1 38.3 44.1 Rationing rate (percent) 65.8 72.8 65.3 73.8 85.1 84.6 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The participation rate is defined as the percentage of rural households that obtained work on the scheme. The demand rate is the percentage of rural households that were participants or excess demanders. The rationing rate is defined as the per- centage of those who wanted work but did not get it. 68 RIGHT TO WORK? of households stated that they would like to work on the scheme. Not surprisingly, demand was much higher among men than among women at 68 percent versus 38 percent in R1, and 64 percent versus 44 percent in R2. However, when seen in light of extremely low overall labor force participation rates for women in Bihar, female demand for BREGS employment is notable.6 The data indicate that BREGS meets only a fraction of the demand. In R1, only 22 percent of rural households secured any work on the scheme (table 2.2). Of those demanding work, only one-third got work—a rationing rate of 66 percent. The participation rate fell and the degree of unmet demand increased between the two surveys, with nearly three-quarters (73 percent) of the households rationed away from work in R2. Women are less likely to demand work, and the rationing process is less favorable to them. In both rounds of the survey, fewer than 7 percent of women interviewed in the sampled households worked on the scheme. The vast majority (85 percent) of women who would like to get work on the scheme were rationed. When we observe overall participation rates for different times, such as in table 2.2, we do not know whether the same people or dif- ferent people are participating at each date. By exploiting the panel design of the survey, we can learn more about exits and entries, that is, the dynamics of participation. We find high levels of churning, with households entering and exiting the program from year to year. Table 2.3 reports move- ment of households between the three categories—participants, excess demanders, and the rest—between the two survey rounds. Fewer than half (45 percent) of the R1 BREGS participants were Table 2.3 Joint Distribution of Program Participation across the Two Survey Rounds number of households Round 2 BREGS Excess The participants demanders rest Total BREGS participants 279 291 50 619 Excess demanders 162 685 333 1,179 Round 1 The rest 40 310 580 929 Total 480 1,285 963 2,728 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: These are the weighted number of observations (calculated using household weights) in each cell in the subsample of panel households. UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 69 also participants in R2. Some 42 percent of participants in R2 were new entrants to the scheme. Only 10 percent of households were BREGS participants in both rounds of the survey. The degree of churning helps explain the similarity between participants and excess demanders that will be seen in chapter 3. High levels of churning can be consistent with BREGS serving an insurance function, such that households seek employment on the scheme to cope with shocks and exit to the private labor market at other times. However, that interpretation is not consistent with the evidence already presented on the extent of rationing. Effective insurance requires that people can get the work when they want it.7 It appears more plausible that withdrawals from the program are involuntary. Four of every five participants who exited the program expressed a desire to stay in it. About 72 percent of those in R1 who said they wanted work on BREGS but did not get it also expressed demand for work in R2. Only 19 percent of them actually got work in R2. Nearly a quarter of households wanted work but did not get it in both years. This is highly suggestive of unmet demand for work, in that the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act’s (the Act’s) stipulated guarantee of employment to anyone who wants it was not being fulfilled in Bihar. Rationing can also take the form of fewer days of work than desired. Many households that participated may have been rationed in that they would have liked more days of work and still had fewer than the 100 days stipulated by the Act. This picture is confirmed in a comparison of the days of employment provided to days demanded under the scheme (table 2.4). In 2008/09 (the year preceding R1), the scheme provided 24 days of employment to participating households, on average. However, 91 percent of these households reported that they would have liked additional days of work but were unable to get them. Satisfaction levels improved in R2—average employment rose to 37 days per participating household, but 82 percent of households continued to believe that they were rationed. If we truncate each individual’s employment (participating days plus number of additional days desired) to 100 days, the average total extra days of desired employ- ment across all participants in R2 was 44 days. Excess demanders (those not presently employed by the scheme) also reported high demand, at 79 days per household. Household perceptions about why they did not get as much employment as they wanted on the scheme suggest possible reasons for rationing (table 2.5). Among participants, the overwhelming reason seems to be the lack of available BREGS work. This lack of work could reflect supply-side constraints (discussed in chapter 8) 70 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 2.4 Days of Employment Provided and Demanded in the Past Year Round 1 Round 2 Number of BREGS days worked Per household 23.5 36.8 Per female 4.7 8.1 Per male 18.4 27.4 Percentage of households that worked 100 days 2.1 9.0 Number of additional BREGS days wanted Per household — 71.5 Per participating household 44.4 43.6 Per excess demander — 79.2 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Average days are reported for the group of households that were BREGS participants or excess demanders; households not interested in working on the pro- gram are not included. The number of days worked plus additional days desired is truncated at 100. Information on days desired by nonparticipating households was not collected in round 1 of the BREGS survey. — = not available. Table 2.5 Household Perceptions about Why They Were Rationed percentage of respondents Excess Participants demanders Why did you not get (more) work on BREGS in the past year? Female Male Female Male Work is not available at worksite 70.2 77.4 26.1 24.4 I was not present when the work was available 2.4 2.9 6.5 7.6 Did not get work even after demanding 9.4 4.4 11.1 12.0 Do not have any facility for child care 4.2 0.0 n.a. n.a. Work not allotted to women 0.1 0.0 7.7 0.0 Do not have any personal contacts 2.0 0.7 4.0 3.9 Because of the 100-day limit of MGNREGS 0.5 2.5 n.a. n.a. Unable to work or disabled n.a. n.a. 3.2 4.5 Do not have job card n.a. n.a. 34.1 40.9 Other 11.2 12.1 7.3 6.8 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Table reports percentage of households that report stated option as the main reason for why they did not get work (for excess demanders) or more days than they actually worked (for participants). Results reported for round 2 of the BREGS survey (the question was not asked in round 1). MGNREGS = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme; n.a. = not applicable, as option not provided to respondent. UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 71 that limit the ability of local administrators to open sufficient BREGS worksites in a timely manner. Among excess demanders, the lack of a job card was cited as the primary reason for lack of work. This reason is probably valid given that most participants did possess job cards (78 percent in R1 and 87 percent in R2), while a very large fraction of nonparticipants (79 percent in R1 and 68 percent in R2) did not. However, a small fraction of households without job cards were also able to get employment on the scheme (8 percent in R1 and 4 percent in R2), suggesting that other factors were also at play. For instance, it is clear from the survey data and field reports that very few people were aware of how to apply for work, the first step toward registering demand. As documented later, the work applica- tion process was not yet in place. The vast majority of those who have worked report that work was “given to them” by the local authorities. Others who are interested in working wait passively for work to come their way. Despite growing public awareness (docu- mented in chapter 7), few people understand that getting a job card is only the first step in obtaining employment on the scheme, which must then be followed by an application for work. In that sense, the fundamental principle of employment on demand has yet to sink in. Of course, demanding work does not automatically translate into getting it—more than 10 percent of excess demanders state that they asked for work but were turned away. Households also perceived the need to have the right personal contacts and networks to be granted employment, a theme examined in more detail in the next chapter on who gets work and who is rationed out. The extent of the rationing raises fundamental doubts about the scheme’s effectiveness in reducing poverty, both now and in the future. We will return to these concerns throughout this volume. But first it is of interest to look more closely at how the available work is rationed, which we take up in the next chapter. Annex 2A The survey data for this study come mainly from two rounds of a panel survey administered to households, individuals (in the selected households), villages, Gram Panchayats, and blocks, with a gap of one year between survey rounds. The survey covered 150 villages across Bihar. In total, 3,000 households and approximately 5,000 individuals were interviewed in each of the two rounds. This annex describes the BREGS sampling design and provides definitions of key variables used in the analysis. 72 RIGHT TO WORK? Sampling Design The survey covered 150 villages spread across all 38 districts of Bihar. A two-stage sampling design was followed. In the first stage, 150 villages were selected; in the second stage 20 households from each of these villages were selected. The BREGS sample recognized six explicit strata, defined by combinations of three household groups and two village groups. The three household strata (ST) were defined as follows: ST1: Households in which at least one member engaged in public works employment in the past year. ST2: Households in which at least one member engaged in other (non–public works) casual work (but no one engaged in public works employment in the past year). ST3: All other households. Because of the program’s wide variation in coverage and overall low coverage, two village strata (VS) were defined on the basis of pro- gram coverage (based on administrative data for 2008/09), as follows: VS1: Villages in districts with high BREGS coverage (10 districts). VS2: Villages in the remaining districts (28 districts). The 2001 census frame of villages was used as the sampling frame. Urban areas as defined in the 2001 census were explicitly excluded from the study. The selection criteria for selection in R1 were as follows: a. First stage, village selection. Half the sample villages (75 vil- lages) were drawn from the high coverage stratum (VS1), and the remaining 75 villages from the remaining set of districts (VS2). Villages were selected within each stratum (as defined above) with probability proportional to village size. b. Second stage, household selection. In villages of 150 house- holds or fewer, a complete listing of all households was imple- mented and some basic information collected. Households were grouped into the three strata described above. Larger villages were divided into segments of roughly 75 households each, from which two segments were selected randomly to be completely listed. Twenty households were selected from all the households in the list using the following rule (where applicable or available): seven households from ST1, seven households from ST2, and six households from ST3. In vil- lages in which there were insufficient households in a stratum, UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 73 households were taken from other strata, with probability proportional to size of the strata in the village. c. Individual selection . From within each household, two individuals—one adult male and one adult female (ages 18–60)—were selected to respond to the individual-level questionnaire. Priority was given to individual members who had engaged in public works, if any: i. For households from ST2 or ST3 (no public works partici- pants), the household questionnaire was administered to the (ideally male) main respondent, and the relevant individual questionnaire to the same person. An adult respondent of opposite gender for the other individual questionnaire was selected by simple random sampling from the household roster. ii. For households from ST1 (at least one public works par- ticipant), the household questionnaire was administered to the (ideally male) main respondent, and the individual ques- tionnaire to the same person if he or she had participated in public works. If the main respondent had not participated in public works, the individual questionnaire was adminis- tered to a household member who had. Similarly, for the opposite gender, the individual questionnaire was adminis- tered to the person who had participated in public works. If no one of a particular gender had participated in public works, the individual questionnaire was administered to a person selected randomly from the household roster. Note that because the BREGS program participants were purpo- sively sampled within households in ST1, in the study we do not report any estimates that are representative of the male or female adult population in Bihar. In all cases, estimates are representative of rural households. Table 2A.1 presents the distribution of households and individu- als across strata. R2 aimed to interview the same households and individuals as in R1. Village listing sheets were not updated in R2. In R2, the rules for substitution of households, and substitution or addition of indi- viduals, were defined as follows: a. Household substitution. If a household was not found (for example, because it had migrated out, or was temporarily unavailable when the survey team was in the village), the household was replaced by an adjacent household in the same stratum from the R1 list. A sample size of 3,000 households was retained in R2. For replacement households, the same rules of individual selection were followed as in R1. 74 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 2A.1 Distribution of Households and Individuals across Strata (Round 1) Number of Percentage of Number of Percentage of Stratum households households a individuals individuals a ST1 922 27.1 1,650 29.2 ST2 1,137 40.4 1,929 39.6 ST3 941 32.5 1,593 31.2 Total 3,000 100.0 5,172 100.0 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: ST1 = worked on public works in 2008; ST2 = worked at other casual labor in 2008; ST3 = worked on neither public works nor casual labor in 2008. a. With sample weights. b. Individual substitution. An attempt was made to interview the same individuals as in R1. If a person was not found or was not available, another adult (ages 18–60) of the same gender in the household was interviewed. c. Individual addition. For households from which only one indi- vidual was interviewed in R1 (for example, because no one from the other gender was resident in the household or avail- able during the survey period), and a person of the missing gender was available during R2, that person was interviewed. Note that additions and substitutions were done from the updated household roster (that is, they need not be limited to those listed in the R1 household roster). Sample Size and Attrition In both survey rounds, 3,000 households and approximately 5,000 individuals were interviewed (see table 2A.2). In R2, 272 of the 3,000 households (8 percent) were new households. Of the 5,012 individu- als interviewed in R2, 4,555 were from panel households and 3,749 had been interviewed in R1. The panel comprises 2,728 households and 3,749 individuals. The overall attrition rate for households was low at 8 percent. Household attrition was not concentrated in any particular stra- tum, and most of the replacements were taken from the same stra- tum except for 13 households (spread across 11 villages) for which replacement households were from different strata. There were relatively few refusals; two-thirds of the attrition was because the household was away temporarily when the survey team visited the village. However, the reasons for attrition do differ across strata. UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 75 Table 2A.2 Sample Size (Rounds 1 and 2) Cross-sections Panel Round 1 Round 2 (Round 1, Round 2) Households 3,000 3,000 2,728 Individuals 5,172 5,012 3,749 Males 2,399 2,230 1,586 Females 2,773 2,782 2,163 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Refusals were more likely in the third strata (ST3), while temporary or permanent migration was more likely in other strata, especially ST2 (casual labor other than public works). The characteristics of those lost through attrition versus others suggest that households lost through attrition tend to have fewer adult males, to have younger household heads, and to be poorer. Households with the first two characteristics would be expected to be less likely to work on BREGS, while poorer households may be more likely to work on BREGS. However, probit regressions for household-level BREGS participation indicate no significant attri- tion effect. There also does not seem to be an attrition bias when estimating impacts of the movie (see chapter 7): (1) the attrition rate did not vary between treatment and control groups, and (2) the characteristics of those who were lost through attrition were similar between treatment and control groups. Calculation of Weights The raising factors (sampling weights) needed to extrapolate the results from the sample to rural Bihar are the inverses of their selection probabilities. Survey round–specific household and vil- lage weights were calculated using the 2001 census sampling frame and the R1 listing to reflect the probability of selection. There were some differences in household and individual weights between the two rounds resulting from the replacement of R1 households in R2 with households from different strata (13 cases spread across 11 vil- lages). R1 weights were used for the analysis of the panel of house- holds. Round-specific weights were used for the analysis of the two cross-sections. 76 Table 2A.3 Variable Definitions Variable Definition Source Participants (household) At least one member worked on BREGS Block 1 (individual questionnaire) and Block 19 (household questionnaire) Excess demanders (household) At least one member wanted work on BREGS but did Block 4 (individual questionnaire) not get it in the past year Participants (individual) The individual worked on BREGS in the past year Block 3 (individual questionnaire) Excess demanders (individual) The individual wanted to work on BREGS but did not Block 4 (individual questionnaire) in the past year BREGS days Average days worked on BREGS in the past year by Block 19 (household questionnaire)a all household members combined Note: BREGS = Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. a. Total number of days for an individual was replaced by the response in the individual questionnaire if there were missing values in the household questionnaire. UNMET DEMAND FOR WORK ON BREGS 77 Notes 1. However, because the interviews were spread over three months, there is some overlap in the recall periods between the two survey years. 2. Flood Management Information System, Water Resources Depart- ment, government of Bihar, available at http://fmis.bih.nic.in/history.html. 3. The panchayat rozgar sewak is hired on contract by the state govern- ment for implementing the scheme at the GP level. 4. Background notes were prepared by Development Alternatives (2009), Indian Grameen Services (2009), and Sunai Consultancy Pvt. Ltd. (2009). 5. A background note was prepared by MART (2010). 6. According to NSS 2009/10 data, only 10.6 percent of women ages 15–59 years were participating in the labor force in Bihar (including employed women and those seeking employment). Bihar’s female labor force participation rate is the lowest across all major states and well below the nationwide average of 39.8 percent. 7. In R2, only 13 percent of men and 9 percent of women felt that BREGS work was available when they needed it in the past year. References Development Alternatives. 2009. “Report on Scoping Study for Design and Development of Alternative Implementation Model(s) on NREGS.” Background note prepared for the BREGS study. Development Alterna- tives, Inc., New Delhi, India. Indian Grameen Services. 2009. “Report on Scoping Study for Design and Development of Alternative Implementation Model(s) on NREGS and SGSY.” Background note prepared for the BREGS study. Indian Grameen Services, Kolkata, India. MART. 2010. “The Synthesis Report: Institutional Review of MGNREGS in Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.” Background note prepared for the BREGS study, NOIDA, India. Sunai Consultancy Pvt. Ltd. 2009. “Process Qualitative Observation Report, Feb–Mar 2009, four blocks of Muzaffarpur and Saharsa dis- tricts of Bihar.” Background note prepared for the BREGS study. Sunai Consultancy Pvt. Ltd., Bihar, India. 3 Who Gets Work? Who Is Left Out? The previous chapters show evidence of substantial unmet demand for work on the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). The extent of unmet demand is clear from survey responses in the National Sample Survey (for India as a whole, and especially in the poorer states) and in the specially designed survey for Bihar, the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. This unmet demand raises questions about how well the self-targeting feature of MGNREGS is working in prac- tice. To understand whether the self-targeting mechanism is working despite significant rationing, this chapter examines who gets work and who gets left out. In the process, we will also learn more about how well the extra income gains from the scheme are “targeted” to poor families. Table 3.1 summarizes the main characteristics of BREGS participating households in round 1 (R1) of the survey, and com- pares them to the characteristics of excess demanders, as well as to those of the “rest” who did not express interest in working on the scheme. Participants generally belong to more-disadvantaged groups. For instance, only 31 percent of participant households own some land, compared with 64 percent of the “rest.” They are much less likely to have a pucca roof1 (21 percent versus 44 percent); to have a head of household who has completed class 8 of schooling or more (8 percent versus 36 percent); to rely on own-agriculture as their main income source (7 percent versus 33 percent); and much more likely to be dependent on casual labor, whether agriculture (33 percent ver- sus 7 percent) or nonagriculture (51 percent versus 12 percent). 79 80 Table 3.1 Characteristics of Participants, Excess Demanders, and the Rest, Round 1 BREGS participants Excess demanders Rest Total (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent) Main source of household income Own-agricultural activities 6.5 15.4 32.8 19.4 Own-nonagricultural activities 4.9 9.0 17.4 11.0 Casual farm labor 32.8 23.9 7.0 20.1 Casual nonfarm labor 51.2 40.1 12.4 33.1 Salaried job 0.3 1.7 8.9 3.9 Transfers from friends and family 3.5 9.6 20.0 11.8 Education and labor history Household head illiterate 69.3 60.0 42.1 55.9 Household head completed class 8 or higher 7.8 18.3 35.9 22.0 Household men engage in casual work 95.9 74.2 24.8 62.0 Household women engage in casual work 55.7 42.6 12.4 35.1 Male members ever migrated for work 47.7 48.7 31.3 42.5 Social identity Scheduled Tribe 3.1 2.5 1.1 2.2 Mahadalit 11.9 5.1 1.6 5.4 Scheduled Caste 30.4 25.9 8.6 20.9 Other Backward Class 51.0 55.6 64.5 57.6 Other caste 3.6 10.9 24.2 13.9 Hindu 95.7 88.5 83.8 88.5 Muslim 4.1 11.4 15.9 11.3 Living standards Has pucca roof 21.2 22.7 43.6 29.6 Has pucca floor 12.5 13.0 27.4 17.9 Has Below-Poverty-Line ration card 72.2 61.2 39.4 56.1 No ration card 13.2 20.0 24.9 20.2 Owns land (other than the homestead) 30.7 36.8 64.2 44.9 Monthly per capita expenditure (rupees) 625.7 716.0 828.4 734.6 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The figures give the percentage of households with the specified characteristics in each group in round 1. Mahadalit is a subclassification of the poorest and most disadvantaged among Scheduled Castes, as notified by the government of Bihar. A pucca roof is made of materials such as timber, slate, corrugated iron, and the like. (The alternative, a kutcha roof, is made of materials such as bamboo or thatch.) Below-Poverty-Line (BPL) ration card refers to the card that defines the poverty status of rural households and determines entitlements to various government programs. We refer to the combined set of BPL (41 percent), Antyodaya (14 percent), and Annapoorna (less than 1 percent) cardholders as having a BPL card. Antyodaya cards are for the “poorest of the poor” (which was initially a subcategory of BPL households). Annapoorna cards are distributed to poor individuals 65 years or older who do not benefit from the Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension. Note that the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) is not specifically targeted to BPL households. 81 82 RIGHT TO WORK? In other respects as well, such as consumption levels, it is clear that participants are poorer than the rest. Participation of disadvantaged social groups is high in comparison with that of other groups, a finding also corroborated by other field studies. About 45 percent of participating households were Sched- uled Caste or Scheduled Tribe (SC/ST) in R1, which is well above the SC/ST share in the population (29 percent). This high relative level of participation is particularly true of Mahadalits, who in R1 com- prised 5 percent of households but more than twice that as a share (12 percent) of participant households.2 By round 2 (R2) of the survey, overall household participation rates fell, but SC/ST households were more likely to retain BREGS employment. Thus, in R2, more than 50 percent of BREGS participants were drawn from SC/ST groups. These patterns suggest that assignment of work on the scheme is pro- poor, despite very low levels of coverage and high unmet demand. In many respects, as can be seen in table 3.1, excess demand- ers are not very different from participants. For example, the two groups have similar propensities to migrate for employment, and their housing is of the same quality. Excess demanders are better off than participants along some dimensions (for example, land owner- ship, monthly consumption per capita, lower dependence on casual labor), but in all characteristics are more similar to participants than they are to the rest. This is not surprising given the large degree of churning in the scheme reviewed in chapter 2, with households transiting between participant and excess demander categories from one year to the next. Targeting To assess targeting performance, table 3.2 reports participation, demand, and rationing rates by rural quintiles, defined by per cap- ita consumption, from each round of the BREGS survey. The pat- terns for Bihar from the National Sample Survey data, described in chapter 1, are confirmed with the BREGS survey. As expected, demand for work on BREGS declines with con- sumption; richer households are considerably less likely than the poorest 20 percent to want to do this work, although the gradient is flat between the 20th and 80th percentiles of the distribution. Even among the richest quintile, more than 50 percent of households express interest in working on the scheme, possibly because of its potential insurance function. Participation rates also decline with consumption but more rapidly than do demand rates, showing that rationing of work among those Table 3.2 Coverage of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme across Consumption Quintiles of Rural Bihar Mean person days Mean person days Share of days Participation Demand Rationing among participating among all rural worked on BREGS Quintiles rate rate rate households households (percent) Round 1 Q1 (Poorest) 0.333 0.830 0.599 20.6 6.8 27.2 Q2 0.199 0.651 0.694 22.2 4.4 16.7 Q3 0.284 0.698 0.592 28.5 8.1 31.2 Q4 0.221 0.645 0.658 23.0 5.0 14.5 Q5 (Richest) 0.134 0.529 0.747 21.7 2.9 10.4 All 0.224 0.655 0.658 23.5 5.2 100.0 Round 2 Q1 (Poorest) 0.238 0.747 0.682 27.4 6.5 26.5 Q2 0.186 0.655 0.716 30.5 5.6 19.4 Q3 0.158 0.722 0.782 30.9 4.9 22.5 Q4 0.180 0.609 0.704 35.1 6.3 14.6 Q5 (Richest) 0.142 0.551 0.742 58.0 8.1 16.9 All 0.176 0.644 0.727 37.0 6.5 100.0 Source: Estimates from the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The participation rate is the share of rural households working on BREGS. The demand rate is the share of rural households that want work on the program. The rationing rate is the share of those who wanted work but did not get it. Population is classified into quintiles based on per capita consumption in each round. Two outliers (with implausibly high weighted days worked) were dropped from round 2 and three from round 1. 83 84 RIGHT TO WORK? who would like to work is pro-poor. The scheme is also pro-poor in its distribution of total days of employment. This pro-poor perfor- mance is achieved through both demand for work and the pro-poor rationing of work but not by the assignment of number of days of work actually received. The average days of work received by partici- pants tends to increase with consumption, particularly in R2. Patterns of coverage, demand, and rationing by social group (castes and tribes), reported in table 3.3, confirm the positive pro- poor targeting results. Disadvantaged social groups are more likely to participate, and face less (though not insignificant) rationing. In R1, a little more than 30 percent of SC (excluding Mahadalits) and ST households participated in the program. Participation was lower for Other Backward Classes (OBCs) at 20 percent and lowest for all others, at 6 percent. Mahadalits were much more likely to partici- pate, with one of every two households securing some employment (on average, 25 days) on the scheme. In R2, the participation rates of Mahadalits fell, but likely because of the reclassification of other SC castes as Mahadalits in between the two survey rounds. The targeting differential,3 reported in table 3.4, provides a sum- mary measure by which to compare targeting performance by con- sumption groups versus social groups.4 It shows that the program is considerably more successful at targeting disadvantaged social groups (compared with others) than it is at targeting based on con- sumption poverty. The targeting differential for SCs, STs, OBCs, and Mahadalits together relative to “others” of 0.19 in R1 (0.16 in R2) compares favorably with the targeting differential based on poverty status of 0.06 in the same round. As shown in the next sec- tion, this good targeting performance likely relates to the fact that the rationing process in Bihar appears to rely heavily on indicators (or proxies) of poverty. Poor households that do not have the typical profile of the poor tend to be rationed out; conversely, groups that have been traditionally disadvantaged and have household charac- teristics (such as social group, Below-Poverty-Line [BPL] card) that are considered to be reasonable proxies of poverty status tend to be favored in the targeting process. When participation and rationing probabilities are consid- ered over the entire distribution (rather than across quintiles), the correlation with wealth is more complex than might at first be assumed. Figure 3.1 plots participation and rationing against three different indicators of wealth—an index of asset ownership, con- sumption per capita, and land area owned.5 Although rationing of work tends to increase with all three indicators of wealth, the poor- est of the poor (roughly the bottom 15 percent measured on the asset index or consumption) are more, not less, likely to be rationed out Table 3.3 Coverage of the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme across Social Groups of Rural Bihar Participation Demand Rationing Mean person days among Mean person days among rate rate rate participating households all rural households Round 1 Mahadalit 0.493 0.897 0.450 24.6 12.0 Scheduled Tribe 0.319 0.821 0.611 19.5 6.2 Scheduled Caste 0.325 0.858 0.621 31.1 10.0 Other Backward Class 0.198 0.613 0.677 19.4 3.8 Other 0.059 0.398 0.852 17.0 0.9 All 0.224 0.655 0.658 23.5 5.2 Round 2 Mahadalit 0.291 0.863 0.663 56.8 16.5 Scheduled Tribe 0.206 0.836 0.753 21.6 4.5 Scheduled Caste 0.378 0.863 0.562 26.5 10.0 Other Backward Class 0.136 0.594 0.771 31.1 4.2 Other 0.039 0.411 0.904 45.8 1.7 All 0.176 0.645 0.727 36.9 6.5 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme survey. Note: The participation rate is the share of rural households working on BREGS. The demand rate is the share of rural households that want work on the program. The rationing rate is the share of those who wanted work but did not get it. Population is classified into quintiles based on per capita consumption in each round. Two outliers (with implausibly high weighted days worked) were dropped from round 2 and three from round 1. 85 86 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 3.4 Targeting Differentials by Poverty Status and Social Group Participation rates Poor Nonpoor Targeting differential Round 1 0.257 0.201 0.056 Round 2 0.210 0.158 0.052 SCsa/STs/OBCs Others Round 1 0.251 0.059 0.192 Round 2 0.199 0.041 0.158 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme survey. Note: SCs/STs/OBCs = Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Other Backward Classes. a. Includes Mahadalits. than households in the middle of the distribution. Adding controls for household characteristics and village fixed effects6 flattens the gradient but the effect persists. These patterns are explored more closely in the next section. Determinants of Participation and Rationing The summary statistics in table 3.1 are instructive, but there is an interpretational issue because the identified characteristics linked to participation are likely to be correlated with one another. For exam- ple, BPL card holders are more likely to participate in the scheme, as are the landless; but the landless are more likely to be BPL card holders. We need a multivariate regression model to separate out the partial effects. Table 3.5 reports the marginal effects of various household and village characteristics on participation, demand, and rationing. To ease interpretation of coefficients—so that higher values are posi- tive and lower values negative for all three outcomes variables—we replace rationing by its complement, namely, the assignment of work among those who wanted work. (Assignment is, in effect, 1 minus rationing.) There are two regressions for each independent variable: the first case incorporates explicit village characteristics available in the data, whereas the other includes a complete set of village dummy variables to represent village fixed effects. To investigate potential heterogeneity by wealth level, we also estimate these regressions for different wealth groups (defined using the asset index), namely, the richest 50 percent and the poorest 15 percent. The detailed results for R1 are given in table 3A.1 in the annex to this chapter. The following discussion notes cases in which WHO GETS WORK? WHO IS LEFT OUT? 87 the effect of characteristics differ significantly across wealth groups, in particular, for the poorest 15 percent because this is the group for whom targeting is perverse (as illustrated by figure 3.1). The regressions include a cubic function of the asset index as well as a quadratic function of landholding.7 (Consumption was not used given the potential endogeneity concerns.) The pattern of the wealth effects is similar between actual participation and demand. Higher wealth as measured by the asset index is associated with lower demand for this work, and lower actual participation. For landhold- ing, participation falls as landholding increases for 99 percent of the data. (The turning point, at 5.7 acres of land, is at the 99th percentile of the land distribution. This could be due to measurement errors.) However, participation depends on many other factors, to which we now turn. Household Characteristics Given that physically demanding outdoor work is required on BREGS, one expects a family’s demographic characteristics to mat- ter to household demand for work. The regression results show that, controlling for wealth and other factors, a higher share of adult males in the household increases the probability that a household will demand work, and get it. The effect is stronger (in both size and significance) for demand for work than for actual participation or assignment of work. Households with a female head were less likely either to want to participate or to participate; they were also less likely to be assigned work when they did want it. This echoes the findings of a study in Andhra Pradesh (AP) that also finds a lower likelihood of participation for female-headed households (Liu and Deininger 2013). Some households headed by women may have a remitting male migrant member, others may lack labor, and yet others may be denied work even if they want it. There is no sign of a “life cycle” effect, as measured by age of the household head. However, households with more old people are less likely to want this work, but no less likely to get it. Controlling for wealth (including land) and other factors, house- holds with heads who have completed secondary and higher levels of schooling are less likely to participate or to want to do so compared with those with less-educated heads. Note that illiterate heads are the excluded group. However, the negative effect of higher educa- tion is stronger (in size and significance) for actual participation than for demand and strongest for being assigned work. This outcome is consistent with a rationing mechanism that excludes educated households even when they may want work for some reason. 88 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 3.1 Participation and Rationing as a Function of Wealth a. Participation 0.4 household participation rate 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 percentiles ranked by asset index (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) household participation rate 0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0 20 40 60 80 100 percentiles ranked by log (consumption per capita) (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) 0.4 household participation rate 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 60 70 80 90 100 percentiles ranked by land owned net of dwelling (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) without any controls with other household controls with village fixed effects WHO GETS WORK? WHO IS LEFT OUT? 89 b. Rationing 0.9 household rationing rate 0.8 0.7 0.6 0 20 40 60 80 100 percentiles ranked by asset index (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) 0.75 household rationing rate 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.55 0 20 40 60 80 100 percentiles ranked by log (consumption per capita) (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) 0.9 household rationing rate 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 60 70 80 90 100 percentiles ranked by land owned net of dwelling (1 = poorest; 100 = richest) without any controls with other household controls with village fixed effects Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. 90 Table 3.5 Regressions for Household Participation, Demand, and Assignment of Work Participation Demand Assignment of work (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Household characteristics ln (household size) 0.116 0.143 −0.058 −0.070 0.166 0.146 ln (household size) squared −0.023 −0.034 0.045 0.048 −0.036 −0.032 Share of male adults 0.161** 0.153** 0.235*** 0.274*** 0.218** 0.198* Share of female adults −0.048 −0.061 −0.165** −0.185** −0.042 −0.062 Share of elderly −0.062 −0.115 −0.293*** −0.239** 0.046 −0.074 Share of children (younger than age 6) 0.059 0.060 −0.066 −0.050 0.132 0.128 Gender of head (male = 1) 0.069*** 0.081*** 0.090*** 0.103*** 0.091** 0.096** Age of head (years) 0.004 0.006 0.000 −0.000 0.007 0.007 Age of head (years), squared −0.000 −0.000 −0.000 −0.000 −0.000 −0.000 Maximum education in household Literate (< class 5) 0.011 −0.003 0.012 0.008 0.017 0.011 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.016 −0.024 −0.016 −0.016 −0.013 −0.000 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.014 −0.023 −0.046 −0.025 −0.007 −0.014 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.089*** −0.090*** −0.089** −0.072* −0.125*** −0.114** Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.061* −0.077** −0.099* −0.133** −0.049 −0.053 More than higher secondary −0.126*** −0.159*** −0.021 −0.083 −0.233*** −0.258*** Social group Scheduled Caste 0.009 0.072 0.086** 0.111*** −0.015 0.058 Mahadalit 0.111** 0.358*** 0.121*** 0.134*** 0.122* 0.358*** Other Backward Class −0.060* −0.014 0.007 0.029 −0.099* −0.044 Scheduled Tribe 0.019 0.037 0.031 0.085 0.023 0.025 Hindu 0.082*** 0.042 0.096** 0.069 0.114*** 0.050 Asset-house index −0.015** −0.014* −0.032*** −0.034*** −0.012 −0.007 Asset-house index squared −0.005** −0.004* −0.006*** −0.004* −0.004 −0.005 Asset-house index cubed 0.000 0.000 0.001*** 0.001** 0.000 0.000 Land owned −0.068*** −0.087*** −0.036** −0.056*** −0.102*** −0.128*** Land owned squared 0.006*** 0.007*** 0.002 0.004** 0.011** 0.013** BPL ration card 0.063*** 0.087*** 0.054** 0.051** 0.079*** 0.099*** Know Mukhiya or Sarpanch 0.052** 0.061** −0.004 0.013 0.075** 0.084** Know ward member or panch 0.005 0.007 0.065*** 0.066*** −0.020 −0.022 Know program officer or block development officer 0.213** 0.200 0.000 0.014 0.431*** 0.422*** Know any political worker 0.021 0.007 −0.070 −0.093 0.050 0.044 Cast vote in panchayat election 0.092*** 0.117*** 0.002 0.004 0.158*** 0.192*** Household shock in past year Accident 0.015 0.005 0.030 0.026 0.010 −0.012 Illness 0.000 −0.002 0.026 0.025 −0.016 −0.028 Job loss 0.037 0.069* −0.011 0.004 0.062 0.090* Natural disaster 0.024 0.021 0.034 0.047 0.025 0.003 Other 0.010 0.036 0.015 0.014 0.026 0.052 Men do casual work 0.217*** 0.247*** 0.272*** 0.276*** 0.247*** 0.286*** Women do casual work 0.071*** 0.079*** 0.142*** 0.158*** 0.073*** 0.070** No male migration 0.020 0.036* −0.016 −0.016 0.028 0.050* Regular-salaried worker in household −0.067* −0.084** −0.142*** −0.158*** −0.059 −0.054 (Continued on the following page) 91 92 Table 3.5 (Continued) Participation Demand Assignment of work (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) GP characteristics GP has a panchayat bhawan 0.005 −0.023 0.015 Mukhiya’s characteristics Age (years) 0.000 0.002 −0.000 Lives in village 0.035* −0.028 0.065** Gender (male = 1) −0.007 −0.043* 0.006 Completed class 5 −0.000 −0.013 0.005 Main occupation is farming 0.014 0.017 0.025 Held a GP post in the past 0.079*** −0.049 0.130*** Family held GP post −0.008 0.015 −0.006 Is a contractor 0.111* −0.000 0.149* Village characteristics Share of Scheduled Caste households −0.046 0.038 −0.107 Share of OBC households 0.039 −0.052 0.060 Predominant religion (Hindu = 1) 0.022 0.005 0.034 Is electrified −0.026 0.004 −0.042 Has a pucca road 0.045** −0.039* 0.075*** Within 5 km of bus stop −0.033 −0.053** −0.046 Within 5 km of GP −0.085*** −0.094*** −0.089** Within 5 km of town −0.024 0.005 −0.035 Within 5 km of block headquarters 0.037* 0.011 0.055* Post office in village 0.016 0.047** 0.019 Nonagricultural enterprises within 5 km 0.039 0.043 0.060 ln of mean asset index in village 0.025 0.135* 0.009 Asset inequality in village −0.246 −0.398** −0.159 Share of households with kutcha house −0.003 0.009 −0.004 Share of households with BPL card 0.058 0.027 0.111 Flood in past year 0.034* 0.021 0.047 Drought in past year 0.010 0.034 0.009 Any shock past year −0.031 −0.003 −0.053 Good relations between social groups 0.027 0.000 0.050 Self-help group in village −0.032 0.012 −0.054* Civil society organization in village 0.023 −0.018 0.038 BREGS group in village 0.019 0.056* 0.010 Other group in village −0.028 0.053* −0.049 Village fixed effects? No Yes No Yes No Yes Observations 2,815 2,633 2,815 2,933 1,947 1,867 Pseudo R2 0.248 0.283 0.316 0.361 0.155 0.197 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Household, village, and GP variables observed in round 1. Land owned is net of dwelling. The omitted education category is illiterate. Probit marginal effects are reported. BPL = Below Poverty Line; GP = Gram Panchayat; OBC =Other Backward Class; km = kilometers. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. 93 94 RIGHT TO WORK? There is strong evidence that group identities or “poor credentials” play an important role in explaining participation, and that these identity effects exist independently of non-land wealth or landholding. Mahadalits are significantly more likely to partici- pate than are other social groups but only among the richer half of households (see table 3A.1). However, this effect reverses when we look at demand for work, in that the poorest Mahadalit house- holds are significantly more likely to desire this work than are the richest. Being a Mahadalit from the wealthier half of the Mahadalit population is a strong correlate of participation but not of demand, suggesting a role is played by group identities in the rationing pro- cess: being a Mahadalit is treated as a proxy for poverty status when allocating work. In contrast, SC households that were not classified as Mahadalits at the time of the R1 survey were at a disadvantage. They were more likely to demand work than general category households, but no more likely to get it. There are weak effects of OBC status on overall participation rates in the sample. Both OBC and ST status variables become very significant negative determinants of partici- pation among the poorest 15 percent (see table 3A.1 in the annex to this chapter). However, this negative effect arises because OBC and ST households were no more likely to want work than general category households. Being a Hindu (as opposed to a Muslim) household increases both demand and participation.8 However, the household religion effect is much smaller and becomes statistically insignificant when we focus on the impact of religion on household participation within villages by adding village fixed effects. Thus, the religion effect seems to be stemming from village attributes correlated with the religious composition of the village, rather than from whether the village is majority Hindu or Muslim. There are strong signs that households with local political connections—as indicated by reported connections to village leaders (for example, the Mukhiya or Sarpanch) or administrative officials (for example, the block development officer [BDO])9—are more likely to get BREGS work, even though their demand for work is not any higher. The pattern is reversed, however, for self-reported connections to the ward member, which increases demand but not participation. We can only speculate on why. Ward members may be important sources of village information about the scheme, while the assignment of work lies under the control of the Mukhiya and others (such as the panchayat rozgar sewak [PRS]). However, focusing on the poorest 15 percent, we find notable differences in the effects of political connections on participation. WHO GETS WORK? WHO IS LEFT OUT? 95 Knowing the Mukhiya discriminates well among the rich, but mat- ters little among the poor. Connections to administrative officials (such as the BREGS program officer or the BDO) have a significant effect for the poorest 50 percent but again, matter little to the poor- est 15 percent. This result may be a reflection of the “quality” of the political connections of the poor. However, political participation (as indicated by voting in local elections) is a more significant covari- ate with a larger effect for the poorest 15 percent than for any other group (see table 3A.1). Having a BPL ration card is strongly correlated with securing employment on the scheme.10 BPL households are twice as likely to be BREGS participants as other households—a pattern that persists even after controlling for wealth, landholding, and other household characteristics. However, disaggregating by wealth, this result holds only among richer households. Among the richest 50 percent, BPL card holders do not demand more work than other households, but are significantly more likely to get it (table 3A.1). In contrast, having a BPL card significantly increases demand for work by the poorest 15 percent, but has no effect on these households being assigned work. The BPL effect could be picking up some dimension of poverty omitted from the regressions. However, problems of inclusion and exclusion errors in the allocation of BPL cards are well known, and Bihar is no exception. In the sample, BPL card distribution among households is only mildly progressive. Whereas 68 percent of house- holds in the bottom per capita consumption quintile have a BPL card, almost half (49 percent) of those in the top quintile also possess one. Using the median consumption per capita level as the poverty line, we find that 61 percent of Bihar’s poor households are in pos- session of BPL cards versus 52 percent of nonpoor households. These patterns may also possibly indicate that the BPL effect in the upper end of the distribution is picking up not poverty, but privilege—the same factors that determine why a household (among the relatively better off) receives a BPL card may also result in its being assigned work under BREGS. It also may be that in a context of supply constraints, a BPL card is used by scheme functionaries as a mechanism for allocating what- ever work becomes available. Holding a BPL card is not an eligibility criterion stipulated by the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (the Act). However, knowledge of this fact is low: 62 percent of interviewed women (47 percent of men) reported that they did not know that BREGS employment is also available to households that lack a BPL card. That said, when asked why they thought they did not get work despite wanting it, only a miniscule percentage 96 RIGHT TO WORK? (fewer than 0.5 percent) mentioned not having a BPL card as the main determinant. The lack of available work (23 percent in R1 for both men and women) or of a job card (33 percent for women and 42 percent for men) were perceived to be more pertinent. However, BPL status was seen to play a role in acquiring a job card in the first place. In R1, 11.2 percent of households without a job card and who made no effort to get one said one reason for not even apply- ing was not being BPL. Some 3.9 percent of households without job cards and that did make an effort to get one said that they were not granted one because they were not BPL. Of course, as one might expect, almost all Mukhiyas and PRSs report in both rounds that non-BPL households can also get work as per the scheme’s guide- lines. (See chapter 7 for further discussion of household awareness of BREGS rules and procedures.) We find little to suggest that the scheme is providing insurance benefits not otherwise captured by the other explanatory variables. Households reporting shocks did not have either higher demand for work or higher participation (although a mildly significant effect of job loss appears when one allows for village fixed effects). Labor market history clearly matters. If the household includes either men or women who have previously engaged in casual labor it is more likely that they will both demand and get this work. Hav- ing a household member who had a regular salaried job in the past year makes it less likely that the household will want to work on public works; there is a considerably weaker effect on actually doing this work. Panchayat and Village Characteristics GP and village-level characteristics are also driving participation levels.11 The Mukhiya is important to the scheme’s functioning. Villages in which the Mukhiya has held a GP post in the past have higher levels of participation and assignment of work, though, not surprisingly, this village attribute has no effect on the demand for work. Villages in which the Mukhiya resides are more likely to have work, as are villages in which the Mukhiya is a contractor. Better village infrastructure in the form of a pucca road has oppo- site effects on demand and participation, increasing participation while lowering demand for work. Other accessibility indicators also suggest that more-remote villages (farther from a bus stop, farther from the GP headquarters) have higher demand for work, and less participation. Having a post office in the village increases demand for this type of work but has no significant effect on actually getting the work. WHO GETS WORK? WHO IS LEFT OUT? 97 Higher wealth inequality within the village is associated with significantly lower demand for work, and, less strongly, lower participation.12 This effect is particularly strong for the poorest. Possibly the same factors that create high inequality in a village lessen the knowledge of one’s rights under the Act as well as a poor household’s ability to demand those rights.13 (Chapter 7 points to some evidence consistent with this view.) Power relations in high-inequality villages may mean that the scheme gets very little attention. One of the most notable differences in the participation model for the poorest 15 percent versus the rest of the population is in the coefficient of having “good relations among different groups within the village.” This village attribute emerges as a significant positive correlate of participation, consistent with the hypothesis that the job-rationing process favors the poor in more cohesive, cooperative village environments. However, there is clearly some unexplained variance in village characteristics: the pseudo R2 is typically about 0.04 higher in the model with a complete set of village fixed effects, which can be interpreted as indicating that about 4 percent of the variance is attributable to omitted village characteristics. Undoubtedly some village-specific factors, such as the extent to which local officials share the aims of the scheme or their capacity to deliver, are hard to capture empirically. Several other GP-level characteristics (other than the characteris- tics of the Mukhiya) can also be expected to matter to participation. The survey included a module on GP characteristics. However, a sizable share of these data were incomplete, resulting in a marked reduction in sample size—600 households from the full sample used for modeling participation were lost—when these variables are included as predictors of participation. Annex table 3A.2 shows regression results with GP characteristics included, but they should be treated as highly tentative given the potential sample selection bias. (The regressions also included all the variables listed in annex table 3A.1, but we do not report them in their entirety because there were few differences of any note.) The level of safety (as measured by responses to a question about whether it was safe to move around after dark) in the GP attracts a significant and positive coefficient in the participation regres- sion, particularly for the poorest. Certain characteristics of the PRS, the main program functionary at the local level, also emerge. Having a lower caste PRS makes participation less likely for the poor, as does the PRS living outside the GP. Another seemingly puzzling finding is that having a PRS responsible for more than 98 RIGHT TO WORK? one GP (implying a higher workload) is associated with higher participation rates. However, qualitative research suggests it is the Mukhiya rather than the PRS who influences participation. The former is the local elected leader, whereas the latter may often be an outsider to the GP. An important supply-side variable is whether the GP has a shelf of projects ready to start up for BREGS work. This is a stronger predictor of participation among the poor. In the absence of an approved shelf of works, GPs may be constrained in providing work in response to demand (see chapter 8). Determinants of Individual Participation, Demand, and Rationing So far we have only looked at which households participated or wanted to do so. Focusing on the individual level, as in results reported in annex table 3A.3, highlights the particular constraints to participation faced by women in the scheme. The most notable observation is the significant gender effect on participation, favoring men. Men also had a higher demand for work. But it is telling that they were more likely to get work, given that they wanted it, and that this holds controlling for other individual, household, and village characteristics. There is marked unmet demand for work by women that exists independently of other characteristics, which corroborates much anecdotal evi- dence. Other points of note are that demand for work is higher among household heads. Women with stronger self-efficacy, as measured by the Pearlin scale, are also more likely to express demand for this type of work, but they are no more likely to get work.14 A man’s Pearlin scale does not make a difference to his demand for work or participation in BREGS. Days of Employment Rationing can take two forms. Households can either be rationed by not getting any employment on the scheme, or they may receive fewer days of employment than they desire. Chapter 2 documents that both forms of rationing are prevalent. The preceding analysis has explored who gains entry into the scheme. This section explores the correlates of the number of days of employment received, to better understand this dimension of rationing. Table 3.6 reports regres- sions of the number of days of employment at the individual level. The sample consists of participants 18–65 years old, and results are Table 3.6 Individual-Level Determinants of Days Worked on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme in Round 1 Whole sample Women Men (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Individual characteristics Age 0.308 0.328 3.980 8.086 0.743 0.564 Square of age −0.001 −0.002 −0.030 −0.073 −0.006 −0.005 Education Literate (< class 5) 1.609 2.347 −5.208 −6.931 2.922 3.386 Class 5 pass (primary) −5.156*** −2.506 −1.894 7.298 −4.711** −2.707 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.604 0.300 −5.034 4.552 1.318 1.757 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.167 2.857 — — 1.142 5.952 Class 12 pass (higher secondary) 5.081 2.686 — — 7.226 3.041 More than higher secondary −9.384* −6.105 — — −6.895 −0.734 Head of household −5.493 −3.601 −44.591 −60.130 −6.487* −1.219 Spouse of head −10.204** −9.113* 47.665 67.963 −8.987 −9.798 Married or gauna −0.687 0.580 — −0.719 −1.328 0.467 Widowed or divorced −0.929 1.760 −13.929* — −5.573 −0.441 Gender (male = 1) −6.153 −5.334 n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Female Pearlin scale −0.111 −0.436 −2.163* −3.035* n.a. n.a. Male Pearlin scale 0.187 −0.404 n.a. n.a. 0.235 0.037 Household characteristics ln (household size) 3.574 4.436 5.686 −1.289 9.941 8.275 ln (household size) squared −1.363 −1.468 −4.202 −1.148 −2.963 −2.333 (Continued on the following page) 99 Table 3.6 (Continued) 100 Whole sample Women Men (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Share of male adults −3.370 2.450 −19.415* −7.780 3.161 7.304 Share of female adults −7.328 −9.932* −8.542 −24.652 −8.962 −6.241 Share of elderly −7.434 −11.295 −8.146 −53.400*** −6.020 −3.314 Share of children younger than age 6 −1.113 −3.899 −17.825* −4.188 −0.290 −0.624 Gender of head (male = 1) 7.033*** 7.490* −79.847 −110.771 7.614 6.008 Age of head (years) −0.090 −0.843 −2.843 −6.458 −0.285 −0.918 Age of head, squared 0.000 0.009 0.015 0.051 0.003 0.011 Maximum education in household Literate (< Class 5) −3.956** −2.815 −1.243 4.056 −3.865* −2.950 Class 5 pass (primary) −2.914 −3.965** −6.026 −9.079 −3.264 −3.353 Class 8 pass (middle) −1.413 −2.205 −2.184 5.485 −2.934 −3.286 Class 10 pass (secondary) −3.914 −4.018 −6.061 2.426 −5.549 −6.717* Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −2.190 −2.842 0.200 −4.071 −5.885 −6.584 Social group Scheduled Caste 0.970 6.312** 7.074 1.748 0.398 6.838* Mahadalit 2.405 6.097 11.837 −0.099 0.425 4.261 Other Backward Class −2.206 0.575 4.750 1.557 −2.902 0.720 Scheduled Tribe −0.947 4.170 −7.901 −9.624 0.427 6.307 Hindu 0.261 −3.378 15.320* 2.830 −1.153 −3.697 Asset-house index 2.493*** 1.947** 4.562* 4.675 2.524** 1.964** Asset-house index squared 0.473* 0.398* 1.346* 0.988 0.370 0.322 Asset-house index cubed −0.265** −0.213** −0.233 −0.314 −0.266** −0.188* Land owned except dwelling 3.889 3.952 −9.693 8.162 5.369 6.512** Land owned, squared −0.821* −0.689* 13.748 −5.601 −1.028** −1.036** BPL ration card −0.366 −1.744 1.231 −9.671** −0.859 −1.018 Know Mukhiya or Sarpanch 5.361*** 3.209** 7.375* 4.868 4.747*** 3.523* Know ward member or panch −3.630*** −2.180 2.909 8.408 −4.355** −3.176* Know program officer or block development officer 3.849 1.898 14.939 9.650 3.095 3.076 Know any political worker −1.574 3.615 3.674 19.376 0.744 5.430 Household voted in panchayat election 2.584 4.510 10.489 24.080** 1.554 1.140 Household shock in past year Accident −0.397 −1.255 −4.330 −3.554 1.324 −0.316 Illness 1.947 0.313 0.269 −4.095 4.249 2.148 Job loss 3.593 2.241 0.573 3.825 1.875 −0.719 Natural disaster 1.170 1.493 −0.413 1.173 0.756 1.761 Other 4.075 4.312 10.630 14.446 3.429 2.276 Men do casual work −0.192 −2.405 −14.410*** −10.260* 5.550** 1.528 Women do casual work 3.313** 3.767** 4.035 −4.358 2.709* 4.281*** No male migration 3.065** 3.510*** 8.250*** 9.307* 2.229 2.725* Regular-salaried worker in household 3.214 8.469 — −0.245 4.788 11.252* Constant 34.625** 18.930 85.583* 66.340 12.166 −1.320 Village fixed effects? No Yes No Yes No Yes Observations 727 760 194 198 533 562 R2 0.200 0.423 0.560 0.745 0.181 0.433 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Data from round 1 on individuals ages 18–65. All specifications include controls for village characteristics or village fixed effects. The omitted education category is illiterate. Gauna is the point in an arranged marriage at which a wife begins to live with her husband. BPL = Below Poverty Line; n.a. = not applicable; — = not available. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. 101 102 RIGHT TO WORK? reported separately for men and women, using R1 data. Focusing on individuals (rather than the total household days of employment) allows us to explore the potential role of gender, and of other indi- vidual characteristics, in determining days of employment. Household composition and gender effects are strong corre- lates of the intensity of participation, as measured by the number of days worked. Households with a male head get 7 more days on average than households with female heads, and the spouse (almost always a woman) of the household head gets 10 fewer days of employment than the head. Both these effects are consis- tent with the fact that women tend to have fewer days of employ- ment than men. This effect is further reinforced by the fact that households with a greater share of adult women get fewer days, and (focusing on the regression for women) that women get fewer days of employment if the share of adult males in their household increases, or if men in their households tend to do casual labor. Similar to the patterns seen in table 3.5, we find that even after controlling for other household and village characteristics, richer households (based on the asset index or land ownership) get more days of employment, if they participate. Connections (to the Mukhiya or Sarpanch) matter, positively, to participation and to the intensity of participation. Caste and education attributes, or having a BPL card, are not strong or consistent correlates of days of employment, unlike their strong association with house- hold participation. Household shocks are uncorrelated with days received. Finally, note that the predictive power of the regression (R2) doubles when village fixed effects are added, suggesting that village-level effects are very important in explaining the intensity of employment. In summary, we find clear signs that the scheme is reaching the poor, despite the rationing of work. The rationing process appears to rely heavily on indicators of poverty, meaning that poor house- holds that do not have the typical profile of the poor tend to be rationed out. We also find signs that the poorest of the poor are underrepresented, as are households led by women or with a high share of female members. The rationing process is likely to under- mine BREGS’ insurance benefits. Consistent with that expectation, we find that neither participation nor the number of days of employ- ment provided is responding to shocks. Annex 3A Table 3A.1 Participation and Demand for Work by Household Asset Group Participation Demand for work Richest 50 Poorest 50 Poorest 15 Richest 50 Poorest 50 Poorest 15 percent percent percent percent percent percent Household characteristics ln (household size) 0.114 0.187 −0.019 0.030 −0.013 0.062 ln (household size) squared −0.030 −0.035 0.047 0.036 0.006 −0.023 Share of male adults 0.133** 0.264** 0.002 0.319*** 0.138 0.012 Share of female adults −0.079 0.038 −0.076 −0.134 −0.192** −0.116 Share of elderly 0.006 −0.026 −0.087 −0.332* −0.226* −0.087 Share of children younger than age 6 0.066 0.067 0.094 0.002 −0.100 −0.131 Gender of head (male = 1) 0.024 0.121*** 0.089 0.109** 0.079** 0.041 Age of head 0.003 0.010 −0.002 0.000 0.003 0.010* Age of head squared 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 −0.000** Maximum education in household Literate (< Class 5) 0.029 −0.022 0.020 −0.045 0.019 −0.027 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.009 −0.038 −0.099 0.002 −0.037 −0.106 Class 8 pass (middle) 0.006 −0.048 −0.118 −0.106 −0.011 −0.007 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.044* −0.163*** −0.172** −0.105 −0.098* 0.053 Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.044* −0.033 0.083 −0.154* −0.079 −0.475* More than higher secondary −0.055* — — −0.061 0.012 −0.016 Social group Scheduled Caste 0.002 0.000 −0.118 0.083 0.080** 0.012 Mahadalit 0.127* 0.079 −0.106 0.088 0.105*** 0.016 103 (Continued on the following page) 104 Table 3A.1 (Continued) Participation Demand for work Richest 50 Poorest 50 Poorest 15 Richest 50 Poorest 50 Poorest 15 percent percent percent percent percent percent Other Backward Class −0.038 −0.075 −0.328*** −0.012 0.026 −0.067 Scheduled Tribe 0.039 −0.008 −0.209*** 0.061 0.015 0.004 Hindu 0.056*** 0.123*** 0.181*** 0.105* 0.070 0.054 Asset-house index −0.007 0.178 −4.571 −0.056* 0.121 0.204 Asset-house index squared −0.005 0.144 −1.598 −0.002 0.086 0.029 Asset-house index cubed 0.000 0.029 −0.177 0.001 0.016 0.001 Land owned except dwelling −0.040** −0.118 −0.566* −0.043* −0.022 0.151 Land owned squared 0.003*** 0.019 0.109 0.003 −0.001 −0.110 BPL ration card 0.038** 0.076*** 0.048 0.035 0.048** 0.077** Know Mukhiya or Sarpanch 0.062** 0.041 0.058 0.016 −0.010 0.005 Know ward member or panch −0.017 0.031 0.108 0.036 0.069*** 0.068** Know program officer or block development officer 0.135 0.443** — −0.044 — — Know any political worker −0.010 0.114 0.032 −0.116 −0.026 −0.400* Household voted in panchayat election 0.033 0.158*** 0.226*** 0.058 −0.018 −0.025 Household shock in past year Accident 0.042** −0.019 0.010 0.074** −0.010 0.049* Illness 0.004 −0.005 −0.139* −0.031 0.045 −0.007 Job loss 0.000 0.079 0.038 −0.019 0.006 −0.005 Natural disaster −0.017 0.066 −0.021 −0.025 0.060** −0.005 Other 0.017 −0.005 0.059 0.059 −0.044 −0.006 Men do casual work 0.194*** 0.206*** 0.194*** 0.345*** 0.190*** 0.202*** Women do casual work 0.043** 0.110*** 0.047 0.228*** 0.084*** 0.043 No male migration 0.016 0.037 −0.114** −0.062* 0.011 −0.043 Regular-salaried worker in household −0.056** −0.048 0.005 −0.106 −0.232** −0.291 Village and GP characteristics GP has a panchayat bhawan 0.013 −0.023 0.068 −0.009 −0.027 0.017 Mukhiya’s age 0.000 −0.001 −0.004 0.000 0.002** 0.003* Mukhiya lives in village 0.013 0.065* −0.041 −0.010 −0.036 −0.082** Mukhiya is male 0.002 0.007 −0.077 −0.046 −0.029 −0.067* Mukhiya completed class 5 −0.001 0.006 0.006 −0.026 0.004 −0.047 Mukhiya is a farmer 0.022 0.000 −0.044 0.036 0.012 −0.001 Mukhiya held GP post in past 0.070** 0.096** 0.182** −0.065 −0.032 0.034 Mukhiya family held a GP post −0.012 0.008 −0.011 0.033 0.009 −0.017 Mukhiya is a contractor 0.043 0.234** 0.579*** −0.009 0.006 −0.142 Listing: share of SC households −0.116** 0.047 −0.191 0.086 0.025 0.237** Listing: share of OBC households 0.041 0.056 0.003 −0.072 −0.021 0.085 Village is predominantly Hindu −0.019 0.046 −0.003 0.030 −0.010 −0.017 Village is electrified −0.017 −0.030 0.036 −0.004 0.007 0.095** Village has a pucca road 0.053** 0.038 0.012 −0.032 −0.032 −0.099** Within 5 km of bus stop −0.001 −0.062* −0.027 −0.033 −0.055** −0.031 Within 5 km of GP −0.040 −0.107** −0.140 −0.093* −0.073*** −0.103*** Within 5 km of town −0.029 0.000 −0.019 −0.021 −0.017 −0.142 Within 5 km of block headquarters 0.035 0.022 −0.010 0.015 0.006 −0.034 Post office in village −0.003 0.043 −0.074 0.043 0.039 0.110*** (Continued on the following page) 105 106 Table 3A.1 (Continued) Participation Demand for work Richest 50 Poorest 50 Poorest 15 Richest 50 Poorest 50 Poorest 15 percent percent percent percent percent percent Nonagricultural enterprises within 5 km −0.023 0.093* 0.079 0.055 0.045 0.138** ln of mean asset index in village 0.021 0.026 0.098 0.172 0.141* 0.375*** Asset inequality in village −0.103 −0.349 0.125 0.096 −0.664*** −0.612** Listing: share of households with kutcha house 0.051 −0.085 0.013 0.095 −0.031 0.091 Listing: share of BPL households 0.035 0.159* 0.210 0.000 0.037 −0.032 Flood in village in past year 0.062*** 0.005 0.123* 0.036 0.019 0.028 Drought in village in past year −0.003 0.026 0.014 0.015 0.033 0.048 Any shock in past year −0.067* −0.032 −0.012 0.025 −0.037 −0.084*** Good relations among village social groups −0.029 0.119*** 0.188*** 0.004 0.017 0.201 Self-help group in village 0.014 −0.052 0.036 0.014 0.016 0.088** Civil society organization in village 0.045* 0.003 0.125* −0.022 −0.005 −0.017 BREGS group in village −0.045 0.073** −0.009 0.082* 0.032 0.047 Other group in village −0.003 −0.063 −0.079 0.029 0.061* 0.057 Observations 1,396 1,402 421 1,396 1,415 425 Pseudo R2 0.329 0.198 0.272 0.329 0.275 0.425 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Household, village, and selected GP variables observed in round 1. The omitted education category is illiterate. Probit marginal effects are reported. BPL = Below Poverty Line; GP = Gram Panchayat; km = kilometers; OBC = Other Backward Class; SC = Scheduled Caste; — = not available. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. Table 3A.2 Effects of Gram Panchayat Attributes on Participation by Asset Group All Richest 50 percent Poorest 15 percent Safe to move around after dark? 0.067*** 0.005 0.223*** PRS lives outside the GP at more than 5 km away −0.009 0.005 −0.143* PRS is Scheduled Caste or Mahadalit −0.061* −0.009 −0.288*** PRS is Scheduled Tribe 0.026 0.017 — PRS is Other Backward Class −0.019 −0.020 −0.245* PRS is responsible for more than one GP 0.066** 0.016 0.178 Years PRS has spent at this GP post 0.023 0.009 0.011 GP has a shelf of works 0.044 0.014 0.249*** Adequate BREGS staff in past year −0.042 −0.013 −0.129 Adequate BREGS funds in past year 0.021 0.002 −0.000 PRS and Mukhiya are same caste 0.006 0.011 0.061 Works hard to do at certain times of year −0.008 −0.006 0.087 Observations 2,223 1,082 330 Pseudo R2 0.266 0.358 0.344 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Regressions also contains round 1 household, village, and other selected GP variables listed in table 3.5. Probit marginal effects are reported. GP = Gram Panchayat; km = kilometers; PRS = panchayat rozgar sewak; — = not available. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. 107 108 Table 3A.3 Individual-Level Participation, Demand, and Assignment of Work Participation Desired participation Assignment of work (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Individual characteristics Age 0.000 −0.001 0.002 0.002 0.000 −0.002 Square of age (/1,000)a 0.002 0.003 −0.018 −0.026 0.008 0.013 Education Literate (< class 5) 0.006 0.013 −0.095*** −0.107*** 0.022 0.038 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.007 −0.010 −0.017 −0.007 −0.015 −0.020 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.024* −0.017 −0.115** −0.096** −0.028 −0.015 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.039*** −0.050*** −0.050 −0.093** −0.072** −0.086*** Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.024 −0.017 −0.058 −0.058 −0.034 −0.008 More than higher secondary 0.944*** 0.938*** −0.006 −0.053 0.859*** 0.849*** Household head 0.010 0.034 0.050 0.054 0.025 0.067 Spouse of head −0.041* −0.016 −0.022 −0.012 −0.081* −0.036 Married or gauna −0.048 −0.040 −0.082 −0.070 −0.075 −0.064 Widowed or divorced −0.010 0.006 −0.107 −0.054 −0.026 0.003 Male gender 0.082*** 0.117*** 0.477*** 0.535*** 0.123*** 0.181*** Male Pearlin scale −0.000 −0.001 −0.010 −0.012 0.000 −0.001 Female Pearlin scale −0.003 −0.004 0.022*** 0.024*** −0.008 −0.009 Household characteristics ln (household size) 0.050 0.040 −0.015 −0.003 0.123 0.073 ln (household size) squared −0.018 −0.016 0.004 0.009 −0.044 −0.028 Share of male adults 0.014 0.001 −0.097 −0.056 0.039 0.019 Share of female adults −0.080** −0.078* −0.119 −0.145 −0.139* −0.144* Share of elderly −0.040 −0.128 −0.185 −0.092 −0.064 −0.278 Share of children younger than age 6 0.017 −0.002 −0.028 −0.007 0.040 0.003 Male head 0.007 −0.004 −0.051 −0.088** 0.010 −0.010 Age of head 0.000 0.000 −0.004 −0.002 0.000 0.001 Age of head, squared (/1,000)a −0.004 0.002 0.026 0.005 −0.007 −0.001 Maximum education in household Literate (< Class 5) 0.001 −0.006 0.037 0.029 0.000 −0.007 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.016 −0.014 −0.005 −0.019 −0.031 −0.019 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.002 −0.007 −0.016 −0.008 −0.002 −0.013 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.018 −0.007 −0.065 −0.053 −0.031 −0.018 Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.018 −0.029 −0.074 −0.126** −0.012 −0.027 More than higher secondary −0.098*** −0.101*** −0.069 −0.128* −0.180*** −0.186*** Social group Scheduled Caste 0.003 0.039 0.165*** 0.187*** −0.015 0.037 Mahadalit 0.084** 0.255*** 0.226*** 0.238*** 0.129** 0.314*** Other Backward Class −0.031* −0.001 0.065* 0.073** −0.066** −0.020 Scheduled Tribe 0.080* 0.092* 0.093 0.174*** 0.122* 0.113 Hindu 0.037*** 0.017 0.072** 0.092** 0.068*** 0.034 Asset-house index −0.007*** −0.007*** −0.038*** −0.040*** −0.008* −0.007 Asset-house index cubed (/1,000)a — — 0.254 0.268 — — Land owned −0.019* −0.026** −0.042*** −0.057*** −0.033* −0.046** BPL ration card 0.028*** 0.031*** 0.059*** 0.053*** 0.046*** 0.047*** Know Mukhiya or Sarpanch 0.020** 0.019* 0.002 0.020 0.036* 0.036* Know ward member or panch −0.001 0.001 0.051** 0.041* −0.013 −0.010 (Continued on the following page) 109 110 Table 3A.3 (Continued) Participation Desired participation Assignment of work (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Know program officer or block development officer 0.037 0.029 −0.004 0.008 0.103 0.120 Know any political worker 0.038 0.047 −0.021 −0.016 0.084 0.100 Household voted in panchayat election 0.032*** 0.044*** 0.006 0.014 0.065*** 0.090*** Household shock in past year Accident 0.011 0.007 0.021 0.012 0.014 0.008 Illness −0.014 −0.005 0.028 0.030 −0.034 −0.021 Job loss 0.032* 0.040** −0.024 −0.028 0.065** 0.074** Natural disaster 0.008 0.010 0.014 0.019 0.007 0.005 Other 0.006 0.005 0.037 0.007 0.017 0.012 Men do casual work 0.068*** 0.083*** 0.214*** 0.234*** 0.082*** 0.108*** Women do casual work 0.060*** 0.062*** 0.159*** 0.183*** 0.098*** 0.092*** No male migration 0.009 0.015* −0.036* −0.033* 0.022 0.027* Regular-salaried worker in household −0.051*** −0.030* −0.187*** −0.166*** −0.088** −0.032 Village and GP characteristics GP has a panchayat bhawan −0.005 −0.002 −0.007 Mukhiya’s age 0.000 0.000 0.000 Mukhiya lives in village 0.006 −0.004 0.020 Mukhiya is male −0.011 −0.064*** −0.012 Mukhiya completed class 5 −0.021** 0.006 −0.038* Mukhiya is a farmer −0.016 0.011 −0.025 Mukhiya held GP post in the past 0.037*** −0.018 0.073*** Mukhiya’s family held a GP post −0.006 0.002 −0.012 Mukhiya is a contractor 0.054 0.073 0.072 Listing: share of SC households −0.011 0.193*** −0.045 Listing: share of OBC households 0.011 −0.095* 0.026 Village is predominantly Hindu 0.018* 0.047 0.032 Village is electrified −0.025*** 0.013 −0.050*** Village has a pucca road 0.016* −0.021 0.032* Within 5 km of bus stop −0.012 −0.044* −0.024 Within 5 km of GP −0.039** −0.159*** −0.052** Within 5 km of town 0.004 −0.004 0.007 Within 5 km of block headquarters 0.006 0.034 0.013 Post office in village 0.019** 0.023 0.032* Nonagricultural enterprises within 5 km 0.013 0.086** 0.025 ln of mean asset index in village 0.023 0.210*** 0.016 Asset inequality in village −0.141** −0.567*** −0.160 Listing: share households with kutcha house 0.010 0.187*** 0.009 Listing: share BPL households 0.067*** −0.031 0.131*** Flood in village in past year 0.003 0.028 0.009 Drought in village in past year 0.013 0.051** 0.022 (Continued on the following page) 111 112 Table 3A.3 (Continued) Participation Desired participation Assignment of work (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) Any shock in past year −0.006 −0.051 −0.011 Good relations among village social groups 0.010 0.009 0.018 Self-help group in village −0.026*** −0.007 −0.055*** Civil society organization in village 0.025** 0.017 0.045** BREGS group in village 0.016* 0.056** 0.017 Other group in village −0.018 0.086*** −0.038 Safe to move around after dark 0.031*** 0.038 0.060*** Village fixed effects? No Yes No Yes No Yes Observations 4,057 4,131 4,063 4,699 2,965 3,076 R2 0.280 0.319 0.304 0.355 0.226 0.270 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Individual-level regressions on round 1 data for individuals ages 18–65. If individual reports not having heard of BREGS, observations are set to missing. The omitted education category is illiterate. Gauna is the point in an arranged marriage at which a wife begins to live with her husband. BPL = Below Poverty Line; GP = Gram Panchayat; km = kilometers; OBC = Other Backward Class; SC = Scheduled Caste; — = not available. a. Variables rescaled to reveal at least one significant figure for their coefficients. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. WHO GETS WORK? WHO IS LEFT OUT? 113 Notes 1. Pucca refers to a solid, permanent, or proper structure and is often contrasted to kutcha, meaning crude or temporary. A pucca roof is made of materials such as timber, slate, corrugated iron, or the like. The alternative, a kutcha roof, is made of materials such as bamboo or thatch. 2. As mentioned in chapter 1, four broad categories are typically used to classify households into social groups—Scheduled Castes (SCs), Sched- uled Tribes (STs), Other Backward Classes (OBCs), and others. In Bihar, Mahadalits, comprising the poorest and most disadvantaged among SCs, have been notified as a separate subcategory by the state government. 3. See chapter 1 for an explanation of the targeting differential. 4. As in chapter 1, for consumption groups, the targeting differential is defined as the difference between the BREGS participation rates of the poor and the nonpoor. For social groups, we estimate it as the difference between the weighted average participation rate of SCs, STs, OBCs, and Mahadalits, and the participation rates for “others.” Tables 1.4 and 1.5 report the all- India results. 5. The asset index is the first principal component of an index that combines data on household ownership of durables and dwelling character- istics as a proxy for household wealth (following Filmer and Pritchett [2001]). As in the corresponding figure in chapter 1 (figure 1.5 for all-India results), the x-axis is the percentile of the wealth distribution. 6. The controls are entered linearly, giving a “partial linear regression” in which the wealth effect is nonparametric. 7. These parametric functional forms appeared to offer a reasonably good approximation over the bulk of the data to the nonparametric func- tional forms shown in figure 3.1, though naturally they still have less flexi- bility in representing the data. 8. Fewer than 1 percent of households were neither Hindu nor Muslim. 9. The Mukhiya, in Bihar, is the elected leader of the GP and is respon- sible for implementation of development programs at the panchayat level. The Sarpanch is the elected leader of the panchayat judicial body. The BDO is a civil servant responsible for the administration of a block. GPs are typically divided into a number of wards, each of which is represented by the elected ward member in the Gram Panchayat body. 10. BPL cards, used to target a number of social assistance schemes, are meant for poor households that are identified based on a periodic BPL Cen- sus. Note that we refer to the combined set of BPL, Antyodaya, and Annapoorna cardholders as BPL households (see note to table 3.1). 11. The explanatory power of the regression models increases with the inclusion of village fixed effects or village characteristics compared with specifications with household characteristics only. 114 RIGHT TO WORK? 12. We measure inequality of wealth within a village using the mean log deviation from the village household mean of the asset index. This is a standard inequality measure, known to have a number of desirable properties. 13. Galasso and Ravallion (2005) report such an effect of land inequal- ity on the performance of an antipoverty program in Bangladesh. 14. The Pearlin Mastery scale is a measure of the extent to which indi- viduals perceive themselves to be in control of factors that affect their lives (Pearlin and Schooler 1978; Pearlin and others 1981). References Filmer, Deon, and Lant Pritchett. 2001. “Estimating Wealth Effects without Expenditure Data—Or Tears: An Application to Educational Enroll- ments in States of India.” Demography 38 (1): 115–32. Galasso, Emanuela, and Martin Ravallion. 2005. “Decentralized Targeting of an Anti-Poverty Program.” Journal of Public Economics 85: 705–27. Liu, Yanyan, and Klaus Deininger. 2013. “Welfare and Poverty Impacts of India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Evidence from Andhra Pradesh.” Policy Research Working Paper No. 6543, World Bank, Washington, DC. Pearlin, Leonard, Elizabeth Menaghan, Morton Lieberman, and Joseph Mullan. 1981. “The Stress Process.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 22 (4): 337–56. Pearlin, Leonard, and Carmi Schooler. 1978. “The Structure of Coping.” Journal of Health and Social Behaviour 19: 2–21. 4 Wages The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (the Act) stipulates a minimum wage rate for the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). In 2009, an all- India uniform wage of 100 rupees (Rs) per day was notified for the scheme, but adjusted subsequently for state-specific inflation. Five main reasons indicate why the actual net income gain received by workers may end up being less than these stipulated wages for the scheme: • Workers may be unable to meet the productivity norms required for earning the minimum wage if the norms are very stringent or if the scheme attracts workers with lower-than-average physical ability. • There may be delays in payment (random or purposeful). • Corruption may be present, whereby local leaders or officials take a cut, possibly as a “fee” for their services, such as providing wages in advance or collecting wages against “ghost workers.” Or there may be collusion between officials and village residents such that wages are collected and shared against work not done. • There may be exploitation stemming from the monopsony power of the village leader acting as a contractor. • There may be forgone income, that is, some opportunity cost to the worker from some forgone economic activity. This chapter examines wages paid by the Bihar Rural Employ- ment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS): specifically their levels and trends, in relation to the stipulated wage rate for the scheme, the wages paid in the casual labor market, and the total wage bill as reported in the administrative data. The next chapter focuses on forgone income. 115 116 RIGHT TO WORK? Payment of Wages According to the scheme’s guidelines, wages are to be paid either on a time- or piece-rate basis. The time rates are based on the scheme’s notified state daily minimum wages, and the implementing agencies are supposed to ensure that productivity norms are met. An indi- vidual worker who does not attain the productivity norms should be paid less than the scheme wage. During the survey period, Bihar’s notified MGNREGS wage started at Rs 89 per day, rising to Rs 102 on June 16, 2009, and to Rs 114 on May 18, 2010. The piece-rate wages are based on the rural district-level Schedule of Rates (SoR), which specifies the wages to be paid based on the type of work done. The productivity norms in the SoRs are supposed to be such that an able-bodied worker is capable of earning the scheme-notified wages. Several states have modified the SoRs specifically for the MGN- REGS following detailed time and motion studies. We found that, although different SoRs exist for different parts of Bihar, scheme functionaries typically apply a single set of productivity norms. The qualitative research also suggested differences between workers and scheme functionaries in their understanding of the SoRs. In Bihar, qualitative research and the BREGS survey suggest that the time-rate system is common (see also Pankaj 2008). As noted, in this case, too, scheme functionaries are required to ensure that productivity norms are being met by measuring the work done at the worksite. Yet, nearly half of the men and women workers inter- viewed reported seeing no one measuring work at the most recent worksite at which they worked. When measurement was under- taken, among those aware of the process, the majority (83 percent of the male and 75 percent of the female workers interviewed) reported equal payments to all workers at the site. These equal payments indi- cate that wages were estimated on the basis of the work done at the entire worksite rather than that done by individual groups based on measurement against productivity norms. It is of interest that when we asked Mukhiyas why workers reported not being paid the stipu- lated BREGS wage, they typically responded that workers had not performed to the SoR standards and hence were not owed the stipu- lated wage. They also noted that workers did not understand this. Since April 2008, in an effort to promote financial inclusion of the poor and to improve transparency in wage payments, all wages are supposed to be paid through beneficiary bank or post office accounts rather than as direct cash payouts.1 Practice, based on responses to our survey, is unclear. Panchayat rozgar sewaks (PRSs) report that the majority of wage payments are made through beneficiary WAGES 117 bank or post office accounts. In contrast, workers report that wage payments are often made in cash at the worksite. For 2009/10, the time period covered by round 2 of the BREGS survey (R2), more than half of the workers interviewed—52 percent of women and 56 percent of men—reported receiving wages in cash from the Mukhiya, the contractor, the mate, or another official at the most recent worksite at which they worked. In round 1 of the BREGS survey (R1), the shares were 78 percent and 64 percent for female and male workers, respectively. Thus, there is evidence of a decline over time, particularly for women, but the share of total workers getting cash at worksites remains high. This may reflect, in some cases, partial initial cash payments to workers by the Mukhiya while funds are being transferred to worker accounts. Mukhiyas or their spouses or close family members often act as money lenders as well as contractors, making advance payments to workers.2 The reasons given for them doing so include delays in work measurement, delays in obtaining post office or bank accounts, and delays in the flow of funds to the workers’ post office or bank accounts.3 In principle, the scheme should move toward financial inclusion and full reliance on accounts with financial institutions rather than cash. But practice is still a long way from that ideal. Weaknesses in the flow of funds or administration of accounts, lead- ing to delays in payment, create scope for the Mukhiya or other intermediaries to profit by being able to provide advance cash payments to needy workers.4 Fieldwork for this study indicated that some local officials also take a cut from the wages due the worker, possibly in the process of making advance payments. There are many qualitative reports from the field of partial pay- ments and long delays in receiving wages owed. Our survey corrobo- rates these findings. We asked sample households whether BREGS participants had received wages owed in full. Some 72 percent of our households’ female participants in R1 and 67 percent in R2 had been paid in full by the time of the survey, while this was the case for 66 percent and 72 percent of participating men. Women who had not been fully paid were still owed 58 percent and 75 percent of wages, on average, in R1 and R2, respectively. Unpaid men were still waiting for 64 percent and 57 percent of their earned wages. The amount owed is likely to decline with increases in time since partici- pation. The data confirm that the share of wages received is higher for participants for whom more time has elapsed since they partici- pated in BREGS. This can be seen in figure 4.1, which plots the share of total wages owed that were actually received by months since the work was completed for the sample of participants who have not received their full wages. The mean share of wages paid rises with 118 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 4.1 Delays in Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Wage Payments 0.5 share of owed wages actually received 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 number of months since worked round 1 round 2 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on Block 1 from the individual questionnaire. Sample restricted to participants who have not been fully paid BREGS wages owed to them. time up to six months, then stabilizes (R1) or falls (R2). However, even at its peak, the share of wages received among those receiving less than they felt they were due was no more than 50 percent. Advocates have hoped that the scheme would reduce the exploi- tation of rural workers in local labor markets that stems from the labor market power of large farmers and contractors. This might have been wishful thinking given that the local leaders in charge of implementing the scheme often overlap with the set of people who have been employers in the past. For example, the Mukhiya, acting as a contractor directly or via a close ally, can maintain similarly exploitative relations in implementing the scheme. The scheme offi- cially bans contractors, but we found that they are common, with half or more of the responding workers reporting that contractors were present at worksites (chapter 8). The next section discusses how the actual wages reported by workers in the survey compare with the stipulated wages for BREGS. Wages Received by Households The BREGS survey includes two sources of information on wages received. The household questionnaire (Block 23) asks about wage earnings and days worked as casual labor in the week preceding the survey for each adult household member.5 It differentiates between public works and other (agricultural or nonagricultural) casual wage WAGES 119 work, but does not differentiate between BREGS and other public works employment. Wage earnings include cash payments and the value of in-kind payments. In addition, for each work episode, the questionnaire records information separately on wages that were owed and wages that had already been received at the time of the interview. We expect recall to be excellent, but the data have the dis- advantage of covering employment for one week and thus provide relatively few observations.6 Because the survey was fielded during May, June, and July, wage information from this block pertains only to these months. The second source of information about wages is from the individual-level questionnaire (Block 1) which asked (up to) one male and one female adult in each household about their involve- ment in public works, including type (whether BREGS or other), days worked, wages owed, and wages received, separately for each episode of public works employment during the past year. These data have already been referred to above with respect to delays in wages paid. In addition to providing details specifically about BREGS, this source has the advantage of giving us far more observa- tions. The drawback is that there may be mismeasurement caused by the long recall period and by the fact that this does not give wages for non–public works (non-PW) work.7 Given that each source has different pros and cons, we make use of both. Wages in the Last Week Table 4.1 provides summary statistics on casual labor wages reported for the week preceding the survey. In R1, median pub- lic works wages were nearly 30 percent higher than the prevailing casual wage. Wages were higher for men than for women in both segments of the labor market, but for women, PW paid much bet- ter than the private sector. Between 2009 and 2010, average PW wages maintained value in real terms (increasing by 14.6 percent in nominal terms, compared with a 12 percent rate of inflation),8 but the gap between public works and labor market wages nar- rowed because mean casual wages rose by 21 percent, and median casual wages rose by 43 percent. Women, however, still earned sig- nificantly higher wages under BREGS in R2 than in the casual labor market (t = 3.91 in R1 and t = 4.85 in R2). Figure 4.2 and table 4.2 provide a closer look at PW and market wages for casual labor in relation to the stipulated BREGS wage, and their evolution. First, it can be seen that wages owed, as reported by participants on the scheme, are lower than the stipulated BREGS wage rate (top panels of figure 4.2). Summary statistics and statistical 120 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 4.1 Daily Wage Rate for the Week before Interview rupees Standard Number of Mean deviation Median observations Round 1 All Public works 82.7 27.4 89.0 54 Other casual labor 72.2 31.2 70.0 1,031 Men Public works 85.8 25.2 89.0 41 Other casual labor 79.1 29.2 80.0 815 Women Public works 73.0 32.6 80.0 13 Other casual labor 46.0 23.6 45.0 216 Round 2 All Public works 94.8 22.3 100.0 118 Other casual labor 87.2 42.0 100.0 796 Men Public works 99.4 18.2 100.0 75 Other casual labor 97.9 39.3 100.0 574 Women Public works 86.8 26.6 100.0 43 Other casual labor 59.4 35.2 50.0 222 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme survey. Note: Based on Block 23. We treat wages of more than Rs 200 or less than Rs 10 per day as missing values. Wage data are in nominal terms, and reported as unweighted means and medians from the sample. tests reported in table 4.2 show that, on average, workers received Rs 10 less per day than the stipulated wage for much of the recall period. Note that this gap is not due to payment delays, because the wages summarized are total wages owed d to the individual, not the amount actually received by the time of the survey interview. Second, the evidence about whether BREGS has been placing pressure on the private labor market for unskilled labor is not clear. On the one hand, comparing the average wage gaps in R1 and R2 shows that market wages started catching up with PW wages in R2, consistent with labor market tightening, possibly because of the scheme. On the other hand, non-PW wages do not respond in a predictable pattern to changes in the BREGS stipulated wage. In R1, other (non-PW) wages did not rise after the BREGS wage was increased; and in R2, non-PW wages actually fell even as the BREGS wage was raised during the reporting period. (Note that these are nominal wage rates, so the trend increase in wages in part reflects inflation.) Wage trends do show that the gap between non-PW and PW wages narrowed, though more for men than for women, even though women began in R1 with a larger gap between the two sets of wages. WAGES 121 Figure 4.2 Wages over Time Round 1 Public works 20 150 130 rupees per day 15 frequency 110 10 90 5 70 0 50 01MAY2009 01JUN2009 01JUL2009 01AUG2009 date of the survey Non–public works 150 150 rupees per day 130 frequency 100 110 90 50 70 0 50 01MAY2009 01JUN2009 01JUL2009 01AUG2009 date of the survey number interviewed wage paid BREGS stipulated wage rate Round 2 Public works 30 150 130 rupees per day frequency 20 110 90 10 70 0 50 28APR 13MAY 28MAY 12JUN 27JUN 2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 date of the survey (Continued on the following page) 122 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 4.2 (Continued) Non–public works 80 150 130 rupees per day 60 frequency 110 40 90 20 70 0 50 28APR 13MAY 28MAY 12JUN 27JUN 2010 2010 2010 2010 2010 date of the survey number interviewed wage paid BREGS stipulated wage rate Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The figure reports data on wages owed, based on Block 23 for casual labor done in the week preceding the survey. Wages are nominal. The view that the scheme has tightened up the labor market and increased wage rates is also hard to reconcile with the evidence of considerable rationing of BREGS work (chapter 2). However, recall that there is far more rationing in some states than in others. The scheme may be having larger impacts on private sector wages in states with less rationing. Wages in the Past Year from the Public Works Module Turning to the second source of data on wages on BREGS from the survey, figure 4.3 plots the mean wage rate by month for both men and women based on Block 1. The figure also gives total days of work, and it identifies the survey periods. There is a marked seasonality in days of employment, although perhaps exaggerated by recall problems. As before, we see a per- sistent absolute gap between the stipulated wage rate for BREGS and the wage actually reported by respondents. The absolute gap is roughly unchanged over time. There is some sign of convergence in male and female wages, but this outcome is possibly deceptive, given that there were very few observations in the early months, when the Table 4.2 Average Wage Rates before and after Increases in the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Stipulated Wage Round 1 Round 2 Public Non–public Stipulated Public Non–public Stipulated works wage works wage BREGS wage works wage works wage BREGS wage Before increase of stipulated wage Mean 80.7 71.4 89.0 93.8 91.5 104.0 Standard deviation 20.4 30.6 n.a. 24.8 39.8 n.a. Observations 46 946 n.a. 54 226 n.a. t-test: Hypothesis: Mean actual wage −2.8 −17.8 n.a. −3.0 −4.7 n.a. = stipulated wage (0.008) (0.000) n.a. (0.004) (0.000) n.a. (probability) After increase of stipulated wage Mean 92.2 74.7 102.0 95.5 83.9 114.0 Standard deviation 32.8 30.1 n.a. 24.3 39.2 n.a. Observations 20 377 n.a. 81.0 649.0 n.a. t-test: Hypothesis: Mean actual wage −1.3 −17.6 n.a. −6.9 −19.6 n.a. = stipulated wage (0.199) (0.000) n.a. (0.000) (0.000) n.a. (probability) Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The wage was increased to 102 rupees (Rs) on June 16, 2009, in round 1, then to Rs 104, and to Rs 114 on May 18, 2010, in round 2. T-tests use only daily wages greater than Rs 10 per day and lower than Rs 200 per day. The number of observations differs from that in table 4.1 because in this table 123 we use observations even when a valid gender identifier is missing and drop those with missing survey dates. Wage data are unweighted. n.a. = not applicable. 124 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 4.3 Evolution of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Wages and Days Worked over the Entire Survey Period 30 140 25 120 20 100 days (millions) rupees per day 15 80 10 60 5 40 0 20 01JUL 01JAN 01JUL 01JAN 01JUL 2008 2009 2009 2010 2010 BREGS stipulated wage rate reported BREGS wage rate (male) reported BREGS wage rate (female) number of BREGS days reported v survey Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on Block 1 of the BREGS survey, individual questionnaire with recall over past year. Reported wage data are household-weighted wages owed to the worker. female wage was lower. The longer recall periods required by this source of wage data also raise doubts about the reliability of the early data points. Wages from the National Sample Survey 2009/10 A third source of wage data for Bihar is the National Sample Survey (NSS) for 2009/10. Table 4.3 gives estimates of the mean and median wage rate by subrounds, essentially spanning the period between R1 and R2 of the BREGS survey. Here too we see an increase in agricultural wages, notably between subrounds 2 and 3, corresponding to the last quarter of 2009 and first quarter of 2010, respectively. BREGS activity typically picks up in the first quarter of every year, so this agricultural wage increase does coincide with BREGS activity. However, also note that there was an even steeper increase in manual nonagricultural wages during the year. WAGES 125 Table 4.3 Daily Wages for Farm and Nonfarm Casual Labor in Bihar from the 2009/10 National Sample Survey, by Subround rupees Agricultural work Manual All operations Cultivation nonagricultural Subround Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median 1. July–Sept 2009 74.8 77.5 72.4 73.3 86.9 80.0 2. Oct–Dec 2009 72.8 80.0 67.6 70.0 103.4 95.0 3. Jan–Mar 2010 84.6 80.0 80.2 80.0 97.1 90.0 4. Apr–June 2010 86.0 81.4 78.9 80.0 120.7 100.0 Total 79.0 80.0 74.4 76.7 100.2 90.0 Percentage change between subrounds 1 and 4 15 5 9 9 39 25 Source: Calculations from National Sample Survey 66th round. Comparing PW and Non-PW Wages for BREGS Participants, Excess Demanders, and the Rest Figure 4.4 gives the density functions for daily casual work wage rates for R1 and R2 (in the week preceding the survey) for public works (PW) and three comparators: (1) the non-PW wages for BREGS participants; (2) the non-PW wages for the excess demand- ers; and (3) the non-PW wages of the others (the “rest”). The wage rates were calculated by taking total wage earnings by type of work in the week before the interview and dividing by the total number of days of such work reported. Two points are worthy of note. First, as already discussed, PW wages are higher than other casual wages earned by BREGS partici- pants, for both men and women. We can reject the null hypothesis of equality between the PW wage and the non-PW wage distributions for both men and women in R1 (probability less than 0.0005 in both cases). This situation is true for other comparator groups as well: the people who said they wanted work on BREGS but did not get it (the excess demanders) were typically earning less than those working on PW. Second, the difference between PW wages and casual wages earned by other (nonparticipant) workers does not appear to be due to different abilities of the workers who are participating in PW. 126 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 4.4 Density of Daily Casual Wages, by Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Participation Status Round 1 Casual work, all 0.04 0.03 density 0.02 0.01 0 0 50 100 150 200 rupees per day Casual work, women 0.15 0.10 density 0.05 0 0 50 100 150 rupees per day Casual work, men 0.03 0.02 density 0.01 0 0 50 100 150 200 rupees per day public works wage non–public works wage: BREGS participants non–public works wage: BREGS excess demanders non–public works wage: rest (Continued on the following page) WAGES 127 Figure 4.4 (Continued) Round 2 Casual work, all 0.05 0.04 density 0.03 0.02 0.01 0 0 50 100 150 200 rupees per day Casual work, women 0.03 0.02 density 0.01 0 0 50 100 150 rupees per day Casual work, men 0.15 0.10 density 0.05 0 0 50 100 150 200 rupees per day public works wage non–public works wage: BREGS participants non–public works wage: BREGS excess demanders non–public works wage: rest Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on Block 23 and questions about casual work done in the last week. Wage data are unweighted. 128 RIGHT TO WORK? It could be possible that piece work schedules such as used by BREGS reward physically stronger workers. However, this explanation does not seem to hold, given that we also see that BREGS participants were earning significantly less in non-PW work than in PW. In fact, there is no statistically significant difference between the wage dis- tributions of the three comparators for either women or men.9 And there is essentially no difference between the wage distribution for the “excess demanders” and the non-PW wage distribution of those who also do PW. Those who get the jobs on PW are essentially drawn from the same wage distribution as those who do not get that work, but want it. This is again suggestive of unmet demand for work stemming from some form of rationing in the assignment of jobs on PW. Impact of BREGS on Wages If BREGS provided an unconditional guarantee of work to anyone who wanted it at a wage equal to or above the wage for alternative work, the BREGS wage rate would become binding on the casual (farm and nonfarm) labor market. Nobody would be willing to work at less than the BREGS wage rate. Lags may be present in the adjustment process, but we would expect to see casual wages catch- ing up to BREGS wages.10 There are intuitive reasons to doubt whether BREGS would be putting upward pressure on wages in the casual labor market. The guarantee is only conditional, up to 100 days, and in practice the work is confined largely to the lean season, when there is less likelihood of a spillover effect on agricultural wages.11 But, probably more important, chapter 1 has shown for all of India and chapter 2 for Bihar that there is substantial unmet demand for work on the scheme even among those with fewer than 100 days of work. With so much rationing, the scheme driving up other wages in Bihar does not seem plausible. The option value of BREGS in wage bargaining in the casual labor market depends critically on employers believ- ing that the scheme is available. The bargaining value might not require a strict guarantee of employment under BREGS; the scheme might still help workers bargain up their non-BREGS wages as long as there is a reasonably good chance of obtaining BREGS work. However, it is hard to believe that this would be the case with the degree of rationing in BREGS jobs observed in the survey data. We cannot rule out the possibility that the scheme is causing a tightening of the agricultural labor market, but the extent of the unmet demand for BREGS work does introduce skepticism. WAGES 129 Could the tightening of the casual agricultural labor market have come instead from the expansion of nonfarm work opportunities other than BREGS? Table 4.4 reports the count of person days in all types of non-PW operations from the Bihar sample of the 2009/10 NSS (as used in table 4.3). We see substitution between casual labor (on someone else’s farm) and own-farm work between subrounds 2 and 3, whereas the total amount of agricultural work remained roughly constant. What increased between these two subrounds was the amount of manual nonfarm work. This fact is at least suggestive of the possibility that the increasing availability of this work was driving up the agricultural wage rate in this period, not BREGS. Respondent perceptions that improvements in both wages and employment opportunities are unconnected to BREGS (see chap- ter 6) are also consistent with this reading of the evidence. Workers can be expected to know whether BREGS is enhancing their bar- gaining power in the labor market, but they do not think so overall. Also, recall that for women the gap between public works and non– public works wages was much less affected than that for men over the period. The fact that men are generally more likely than women to be engaged in casual off-farm work gives added weight to this interpretation. Note that there may be larger impacts on wages in states where there is less rationing (chapter 1). Indeed, Imbert and Papp (2012) present evidence that in states with more effective implementation, the scheme has had a greater impact on casual wages. A Fuzzy Wage Floor? If the scheme guaranteed employment at the stipulated wage rate, it would provide a binding wage floor across all casual work, including in the private sector. However, given the extensive rationing we have documented, we would not expect to find this wage floor. But how close does the scheme come in practice to providing a wage floor even for PW labor? To answer this question we need to examine the distribution of the wage rates received relative to the stipulated BREGS wages. To see how the wages reported in the survey compare with the stipu- lated wages for MGNREGS in Bihar, the survey wage rate (for the week before the interview) is divided by the stipulated wage rate in Bihar for that week. In R1 the unweighted mean of this ratio is 0.88 (standard deviation = 0.16), and in R2 the mean is 0.86 (standard deviation = 0.21). The corresponding medians are 0.91 and 0.88. It is evident from the medians that about half the workers on PW earned less than 90 percent of the stipulated wage rate. 130 Table 4.4 Sample Total Person Days of Non–Public Works Work by Operation and Subround, 2009/10 Manual Manual Nonmanual Missing Household own-farm Subround agricultural nonagricultural nonagricultural operation code All operations enterprise 1. July–Sept 2009 1,340.0 440.0 150.0 21.0 1,951.0 2,354.0 2. Oct–Dec 2009 1,284.5 473.0 324.0 32.0 2,120.5 2,406.0 3. Jan–Mar 2010 973.0 577.0 235.0 7.0 1,792.0 2,728.0 4. Apr–June 2010 1,035.0 399.5 297.0 7.0 1,759.5 2,280.5 Total 4,632.5 1,889.5 1,006.0 67.0 7,623.0 9,768.5 Source: Calculations from National Sample Survey 66th round. Note: Public works excluded. The total for all operations includes some minor omitted categories. WAGES 131 Figure 4.5 shows the full distributions of this ratio; in each case, both the densities and the cumulative distribution are provided, to show more clearly how many workers were earning less than the stipulated wage rate. For R1 we see that about the same percentage of PW workers were earning less than the stipulated wage rate as were non-PW workers. For R2, we find a slightly higher proportion of workers on PW earn less than the stipulated wage rate than do workers on non-PW work. However, this comparison is deceptive, given the greater compression of PW wages. This illusion becomes clear if we calculate the proportion of workers earning less than 75 percent of the stipulated wage rate. For example, in R1, only 14 percent of PW workers earned less than 75 percent of the stipu- lated wage rate, as compared with 46 percent of non-PW workers. In R2, the corresponding proportions were 21 percent and 45 percent. Figure 4.5 Wages Relative to the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Stipulated Wage Rate Round 1 4 3 density 2 1 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate 1.0 cumulative density 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate non–public works public works (Continued on the following page) 132 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 4.5 (Continued) Round 2 5 4 3 density 2 1 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate 1.0 cumulative density 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate non–public works public works Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on Block 23 and questions about casual work done in the last week. Wage data are unweighted. It appears that BREGS is able to provide a “fuzzy wage floor” to participants that is not available for other (non-PW) casual work. Figure 4.6 examines whether there is a difference in the wage floor for men versus women. We use data from Block 1 in the individual questionnaire, which is based on one-year recall and therefore has more observations for a gender-wise disaggregation. In means and medians, the ratio of the BREGS wage rate to the stipulated wage rate for both men and women was similar in both rounds.12 However, the gap widens at lower proportions of the stipulated wage rate (as is evident from the cumulative distributions in figure 4.6). WAGES 133 The proportion of women earning considerably less than the stipulated wage rate is markedly higher than for men in both rounds. In R1, 19 percent of women were earning less than 75 percent of the stipulated wage rate, as compared with 13 percent of men. The gap narrowed slightly in R2, with 15 percent of women earning less than 75 percent of the stipulated wage rate, versus 11 percent of men. It is clear that BREGS is even less effective in providing a wage floor for women than for men. Determinants of Wages Wages are stipulated by the scheme, though compliance is clearly another matter. A piece rate schedule identifies wages for specific tasks, such that a person working with “normal” effort will attain the stipulated minimum wage rate under the scheme. By contrast, wages for other casual labor (primarily in agriculture) are determined by Figure 4.6 Actual BREGS Wages Relative to the BREGS Stipulated Wage Rate, by Gender Round 1 4 3 density 2 1 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate 1.0 cumulative density 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate male female (Continued on the following page) 134 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 4.6 (Continued) Round 2 10 8 density 6 4 2 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate 1.0 cumulative density 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 ratio of wage rate to BREGS stipulated wage rate male female Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on Block 1, individual questionnaire with recall over the past year. Concerns BREGS only. market conditions and local idiosyncratic institutional factors, such as longer-term agreements between specific employers and employ- ees (possibly tied to other transactions, such as in credit markets). It should be noted that village labor markets for casual labor oper- ate differently from the standard competitive labor market, and are arguably much more complex, involving interlinkage and sometimes complex reciprocal arrangements, including for risk sharing. Local employers can often exercise a degree of monopsony power. In this setting, it is likely that household characteristics as well as worker characteristics will matter to wages. It is of interest to see how the determinants of wages differ between BREGS and the casual labor market. Annex table 4A.1 reports results from regressions of wages on a set of individual, household, and village characteristics. Some practical data issues must be noted. WAGES 135 In particular, we obtained casual (non-PW) wages from the previously mentioned one-week recall segment of the questionnaire (Block 23). As noted, this source provided an adequate number of observations for non-PW wages but not PW wages. For PW wages, we relied on the special segment of the questionnaire that used one year recall (Block 1), and is likely to be subject to greater measurement error. What is most striking in this comparison is how dissimilar the factors determining wages are between the PW scheme and the casual labor market. The PW wage regressions have higher explana- tory power than the casual labor regressions for women but not for men. The PW wage regression with village fixed effects explains a remarkable 90 percent of the variance in wages, though almost 20 percentage points of this is due to the strong village effects that are not being captured by the included village variables. Strikingly, the strong gender effect on casual wages in agriculture and other non-PW activities—whereby the coefficient on being male implies a difference in log wage rates of about 0.3 (0.4 with complete village effects)—vanishes in the PW wage regressions; controlling for other worker characteristics, there is no evidence of women earning less than men in public works. There is still a gender gap, but it is on account of the differences in worker characteristics. Although there are signs of wage discrimination against women in the casual labor market, we find no evidence of such discrimination in setting PW wages. This is clearly a positive achievement of BREGS. In fact, lower rationing in BREGS may also reduce discrimination in the casual labor market. Comparing Survey Aggregates with Administrative Data The analysis presented thus far shows that wages received by BREGS workers are less than what they should be paid if they are meeting productivity norms. The wage gap is evidently not caused by any differences in BREGS workers (for example, less physically able) to the extent that lower wages than received by other workers would be warranted. Although we are unable to comment on whether the Schedule of Rates in Bihar is too exacting for a normal worker to achieve the stipulated wage (in piece-rate work), the majority of payments are made on a time basis or on group (rather than indi- vidual) productivity. On the positive side, we find that, controlling for worker characteristics, there is no evidence of wage discrimina- tion against women on BREGS. Another reason that wages may be lower than stipulated wages is corruption, or “leakage.” As noted earlier, leakage can take various forms, including workers receiving less than their due for work done, or ghost workers (who are on the books but not employed) drawing wages. 136 RIGHT TO WORK? Because the survey is representative of rural Bihar, we can scale up the survey-based estimates (using the appropriate weights) to obtain an estimate of the gross wages and employment received by households. The total estimated wage bill can then be compared with the wages recorded as being paid in the administrative data. This process has been used in the literature as a method of assess- ing leakages in MGNREGS (Bhalla 2011; Himanshu 2010; Imbert and Papp 2011). The shortfall in estimated total employment rela- tive to days of employment recorded in the administrative data is, however, a crude estimate of the number of days accruing to ghost workers. This interpretation depends, of course, on the accuracy of the survey-based estimates and of the administrative data. Although the sampling error will be negligible with our sample size (and rela- tively simple two-stage design), we cannot rule out nonsampling errors in the survey or errors in the administrative data. Table 4.5 provides the results of this comparison, including employ- ment as well as wages. The survey aggregates account for 80 percent of the employment claimed in the administrative data for 2008/09, rising to 86 percent in 2009/10. The survey aggregates account for a slightly lower share of the administrative data on wages paid—75 percent in the first year and 80 percent in the second. These proportions compare favorably with the estimated leakage from another large antipoverty program, the Public Distribution System (PDS), that distributes subsi- dized food to poor households. One study matches administrative data on the off-take of grain by state governments from the Food Corpora- tion of India (FCI) with NSS data on household purchases from PDS shops for 2007–08. Khera (2011b) estimates that in Bihar, as much as 90 percent of the grain off-take from the FCI does not reach house- holds. The corresponding all-India figure is 43.9 percent. These estimates are in reasonably close accord with Himanshu’s (2010) estimates for India as a whole, which are based on compar- ing administrative records with the NSS data for 2007/08. How- ever, Imbert and Papp (2011) obtained larger discrepancies between NSS aggregates and administrative data on MGNREGS. For Bihar, Imbert and Papp can only account for about 30 percent of the admin- istrative amount of employment using the scaled-up estimate based on the 2007/08 NSS. We would conjecture that our survey instru- ment is doing a better job than the NSS in picking up spells of work on BREGS. In addition, the BREGS survey includes various ques- tions asked both at the household and individual levels that probe respondents about participation from different angles and with vari- ous recall periods. Such a specialized survey is likely to capture actual levels of participation and remuneration in the scheme much more accurately than surveys with single questions about MGNREGS. Table 4.5 Wages and Employment Comparison between Survey Data and Administrative Data 2008/09 2009/10 Survey data as Survey data as Administrative Survey percentage of Administrative Survey percentage of data data administrative data data data administrative data Employment (million person days) Person days generated 99 79 80 114 98 86 Wage earnings (million Rs) Total wages paid and owed 8,396 6,310 75 11,087 8,910 80 Total wages paid and received 8,396 5,310 63 11,087 7,850 71 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Totals computed by multiplying survey averages by projected population from census. The estimates are based on a combination of data from Block 1 of the household questionnaire and Block 19 of the individual questionnaire of the BREGS survey. 137 Annex 4A 138 Table 4A.1 The Determinants of BREGS and Non-BREGS Casual Wages at the Individual Level ln BREGS wages ln non-BREGS casual wages All Women Men All Women Men (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) Age −0.001 0.002 −0.012 0.011 −0.000 −0.007 0.016 0.012 Square of age 0.064 0.038 0.086 −0.111 0.016 0.055 −0.022 −0.087 Literate (< class 5) 0.023 −0.000 0.074 0.006 0.065 0.077 0.087 0.029 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.009 −0.016 0.055 −0.040 0.069 0.025 −1.688* 0.076 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.055 −0.114** 0.095 −0.088 0.089 0.126 0.447 0.008 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.029 0.052 — −0.017 0.063 0.058 — −0.001 Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.023 −0.066 — −0.095 −0.103 −0.088 — −0.150 More than higher secondary 0.011 0.053 — 0.371*** −0.395 0.193 — −0.294 Household head −0.095** −0.096* 0.135 −0.065 −0.118 −0.016 −0.600 −0.205 Spouse of head −0.012 −0.044 −0.369 −0.239* −0.168 −0.004 0.032 −0.132 Married or gauna 0.187*** 0.128* −0.080 0.131** 0.208** 0.202** −1.859** 0.194** Widowed or divorced 0.177** 0.131* — 0.156* 0.081 0.151 −2.197*** 0.169 Male gender 0.047 0.076 0.314** 0.382*** Male Pearlin scale 0.015** 0.005 0.009 −0.007 −0.009 −0.010 Female Pearlin scale 0.002 0.006 0.023** −0.020 −0.016 −0.066*** ln (household size) 0.032 −0.048 0.392 −0.078 −0.251 −0.051 −0.524 −0.036 ln (household size) squared 0.001 0.023 −0.108 0.030 0.037 −0.012 0.176 −0.035 Share of male adults 0.092 0.063 0.173 0.035 −0.254* −0.215* 0.696** −0.188 Share of female adults 0.255*** 0.154* 0.147 0.269** −0.344** −0.268* −0.537 −0.417** Share of elderly −0.190 −0.160 0.089 −0.335* 0.012 0.162 0.560 0.053 Share of children younger than age 6 0.042 0.013 −0.161 0.093 0.090 0.020 0.135 0.060 Gender of head −0.042 −0.022 0.481 −0.142 0.141* 0.117 −0.831* 0.250 Age of head 0.003 −0.001 0.019* −0.009 0.006 0.008 0.007 −0.006 Age of head squared −0.081* −0.046 −0.150*** 0.093 −0.086 −0.089 −0.168 0.021 Maximum education in household Literate (< class 5) −0.016 −0.008 −0.112*** 0.009 0.009 0.015 −0.024 0.023 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.033 −0.037 −0.103 −0.011 −0.033 −0.017 −0.056 −0.062 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.080** −0.044 −0.156*** −0.039 0.036 0.040 −0.278* 0.104 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.000 0.002 −0.084 0.016 0.107 0.109 0.128 0.172** Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.063 −0.035 −0.386* −0.020 0.042 0.001 −0.182 0.116 More than higher secondary 0.223** −0.008 0.049 — −0.034 −0.108 — −0.060 Social group Scheduled Caste −0.097* −0.033 −0.028 −0.096* −0.015 −0.159* −0.599* −0.018 Mahadalit −0.102* −0.015 −0.018 −0.088 0.088 −0.013 −0.514 0.089 Other Backward Class −0.090* −0.031 −0.123 −0.081 0.016 −0.092 −0.564* 0.029 Scheduled Tribe −0.111* −0.054 0.016 −0.136** −0.174* −0.258** −0.714** −0.072 Hindu −0.061 −0.035 −0.145 −0.013 −0.161** −0.046 0.207 −0.254*** (Continued on the following page) 139 140 Table 4A.1 (Continued) ln BREGS wages ln non-BREGS casual wages All Women Men All Women Men (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) Asset-house index −0.012** −0.009 −0.016 −0.016** 0.014 −0.001 −0.002 0.019 Land owned 0.008 0.006 0.170** 0.001 −0.002 0.127 −0.525* 0.041 BPL ration card −0.032 −0.032* 0.006 −0.027 0.049 0.013 0.059 0.043 Know Mukhiya or Sarpanch 0.026 0.030 0.002 0.027 0.005 −0.052 0.133 −0.021 Know ward member or panch 0.038** 0.003 0.059 0.049** 0.030 0.015 −0.099 0.060 Know program officer or block development officer 0.064 0.084* — 0.024 0.502*** 0.723*** — 0.349*** Know any political worker 0.062** 0.036 −0.129 0.061** 0.020 0.019 1.605 −0.012 Household voted in panchayat election −0.037 −0.047 −0.120 −0.057 0.057 0.050 0.218* 0.036 Household shock in the past year Accident 0.029* 0.044*** −0.041 0.042** −0.054 −0.019 −0.241** −0.022 Illness 0.044 0.052* −0.014 0.012 0.048 0.016 0.035 0.101 Job loss 0.036 0.046* 0.170*** 0.021 0.070 0.069 −0.141 0.112** Natural disaster 0.008 0.008 0.046 0.018 −0.042 −0.057 −0.184* −0.061 Other −0.022 −0.008 0.016 −0.020 −0.115 −0.112 −0.363*** −0.017 Men do casual work 0.011 0.009 −0.006 −0.016 0.086 0.047 −0.149 0.366*** Women do casual work 0.010 0.019 0.020 0.006 −0.052 −0.073* −0.137 −0.025 No male migration −0.038** −0.020 −0.030 −0.032* 0.074*** 0.040 0.134 0.065** Regular-salaried worker in household 0.118 0.011 0.138* 0.068 −0.012 −0.090 0.001 GP has a panchayat bhawan −0.026 −0.056 0.000 0.112*** 0.149 0.098*** Mukhiya’s age 0.001 0.001 0.001 −0.001 −0.003 −0.000 Mukhiya lives in village −0.022 −0.189*** 0.025 0.022 0.019 0.026 Mukhiya is male 0.004 0.022 −0.010 0.120** 0.114 0.096* Mukhiya completed class 5 0.023 −0.007 0.032 0.208*** 0.276* 0.162*** Mukhiya is a farmer 0.016 0.016 0.007 −0.075* 0.116 −0.146*** Mukhiya held a GP post −0.004 −0.064 0.009 0.087* −0.066 0.121** Mukhiya’s family in GP post −0.020 −0.044 −0.017 −0.051 0.059 −0.084* Mukhiya is a contractor 0.134** 0.106 0.150** 0.050 −0.134 0.006 Listing: share of SC households 0.168*** 0.181 0.101 −0.018 −0.153 0.015 Listing: share of OBC households 0.130*** 0.382*** 0.059 0.069 −0.101 0.046 Village is predominantly Hindu 0.042 0.072 0.028 −0.041 −0.158 −0.002 Village is electrified 0.025 0.071 0.009 0.001 0.081 −0.022 Village has a pucca road 0.060*** 0.079* 0.055** 0.015 0.099 −0.007 Within 5 km of bus stop 0.048** −0.039 0.057** −0.012 0.090 −0.032 (Continued on the following page) 141 142 Table 4A.1 (Continued) ln BREGS wages ln non-BREGS casual wages All Women Men All Women Men (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) Within 5 km of GP −0.020 −0.015 −0.011 0.095** −0.231 0.115** Within 5 km of town 0.022 −0.077 0.040 0.127*** 0.125 0.167*** Within 5 km of block headquarters 0.019 0.076 −0.000 −0.084** 0.248* −0.144*** Post office in village 0.002 −0.019 0.008 −0.007 −0.027 0.026 Access to nonagricultural enterprises −0.116*** −0.064 −0.100*** 0.062 −0.104 0.141** ln of mean asset index in village 0.181*** 0.216* 0.137** −0.186 0.948** −0.211* Asset inequality in village −0.470*** −0.504 −0.377* 0.200 −1.010 0.286 Share of households with kutcha house −0.019 −0.083 0.010 −0.022 0.774*** −0.095 Share of BPL households 0.073 0.144 0.073 −0.196* −0.142 −0.108 Flood in village in past year −0.076*** −0.088** −0.073*** −0.040 −0.064 −0.025 Drought in village in past year −0.041** −0.078 −0.028 −0.035 0.002 0.011 Any shock in past year 0.014 0.153** −0.010 −0.001 0.036 0.016 Good relations among village groups −0.055 −0.083 −0.068 0.011 0.072 −0.011 Self-help group in village 0.010 −0.036 0.033 0.067* 0.124 0.035 Civil society organization in village 0.034 0.006 0.011 −0.023 −0.050 −0.005 BREGS group in village 0.027 0.170*** −0.030 −0.059 −0.219 −0.028 Other group in village 0.007 −0.033 −0.014 −0.007 −0.148 −0.004 Constant 3.841*** 4.285*** 3.332*** 4.226*** 4.269*** 4.114*** 5.684*** 4.253*** Village fixed effects? No Yes No No No Yes No No Observations 858 898 214 644 992 1,021 183 809 R2 0.348 0.507 0.686 0.378 0.404 0.532 0.605 0.292 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on round 1 data and sample of all participants in BREGS or in casual work. Observations for which wages are recorded as greater than 200 rupees or less than 20 rupees are trimmed. Gauna is the point in an arranged marriage at which a wife begins to live with her husband. The omitted education category is illiterate. BPL = Below Poverty Line; GP = Gram Panchayat; km = kilometers; — = not available. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. 143 144 RIGHT TO WORK? Notes 1. Exceptions are allowed in certain isolated areas that have no banking facilities. 2. As in other states, one-third of elected positions are reserved for women in Bihar. Thus, elected Mukhiyas are sometimes female. However, once the election is over, a male surrogate, frequently a husband or father, often takes on the job. When we refer to the Mukhiya we mean either the elected or surrogate one. 3. Also see the discussion in Khera (2011a). 4. This is not confined to Bihar; Vanaik (2009) reports the same practice in Rajasthan—thought to be among the best performing states in imple- menting MGNREGS. 5. Block 23 is a modified version of the standard weekly block module in the National Sample Survey Employment-Unemployment (Schedule 10.0) surveys. 6. Because of the scant number of observations, we do not weight the wage data from Block 23. 7. To reduce sensitivity to measurement errors, we treat recorded wages of more than Rs 200 per day or less than Rs 10 from both sources as miss- ing values. 8. The inflation rate is based on the consumer price index for agricul- tural laborers in the state. 9. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test does not reject the null hypothesis that the distributions are identical in the three binary comparisons between the three comparison wage distributions for either men or women. 10. This is not, of course, a bad thing, because it could make the employ- ment guarantee a very effective policy for fighting poverty by bringing all wages up to the minimum wage. Doing so, however, does not mean that it will be more effective than other policy options. For further discussion, see Murgai and Ravallion (2005a, 2005b). 11. Zimmerman (2012) finds evidence of wage gains for women when MGNREGS work is provided in the main agricultural season, but not for men. 12. The mean ratio was 90 percent for men in both rounds; for women the means were 87 percent and 89 percent in R1 and R2, respectively. Medi- ans were similar, with half the workers (of both genders) earning less than 91 percent of the stipulated wage rate in R1 and 96 percent in R2. References Bhalla, Surjit. 2011. “Does NREGA Really Work?” Business Standard, March 27. WAGES 145 Himanshu. 2010. “Five Heady Years of MGNREGA.” Livemint website. August 31. http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/j679CUhM1MM qfBDdFYSmCL/Five-heady-years-of-MGNREGA.html. Imbert, Clément, and John Papp. 2011. “Estimating Leakages in India’s Employment Guarantee.” In The Battle for Employment Guarantee, edited by Reetika Khera. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. ———. 2012. “Equilibrium Distributional Impacts of Government Employ- ment Programs: Evidence from India’s Employment Guarantee.” Paris School of Economics Working Paper No. 2012 – 14, Paris School of Economics, Paris. Khera, Reetika, ed. 2011a. The Battle for Employment Guarantee. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. ———. 2011b. “Trends in Diversion of Grain from the Public Distribution System.” Economic and Political Weekly 46 (21): 106–14. Murgai, Rinku, and Martin Ravallion. 2005a. “Employment Guarantee in Rural India: What Would It Cost and How Much Would It Reduce Poverty?” Economic and Political Weekly, July 30, pp. 3450–55. ———. 2005b. “Is a Guaranteed Living Wage a Good Anti-Poverty Policy?” Policy Research Working Paper No. 3460, World Bank, Washington, DC. National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO). 2009/10. “Socio-Economic Survey Sixty-Sixth Round Schedule 10: Employment and Unemploy- ment.” Government of India, New Delhi. Pankaj, Ashok K. 2008. “Processes, Institutions and Mechanisms of Imple- mentation of NREGA: Impact Assessment of Bihar and Jharkhand.” Institute of Human Development, New Delhi. Vanaik, Anish. 2009. “Accounts of Corruption.” Frontline, January 16, p. 21. Zimmerman, Laura. 2012. “Labor Market Impacts of a Large-Scale Public Works Program: Evidence from the Indian Employment Guarantee Scheme.” IZA Working Paper No. 6858, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), Bonn, Germany. 5 Forgone Employment and Income Some loss of income from other sources is bound to occur for at least some of those who take up public works (PW) employment. Given that the wage rate is higher than that for other work, some people will naturally be attracted to the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) for the wage gain. Others will no doubt be unable to find other work, and for them the wage gain is also the net income gain from BREGS. The literature on the impacts on poverty of public works schemes has emphasized the impor- tance of assessing the forgone income (see, among others, Ravallion 1999; Murgai and Ravallion 2005; Jha, Gaiha, and Pandey 2012). However, advocates of such schemes have typically ignored this issue, implicitly assuming that there is no displacement of other employment opportunities.1 The BREGS survey asked counterfactual questions of actual participants to obtain their assessments of how many days they would have otherwise worked and what they think they would have earned if they had not been doing the BREGS work during that period. All survey participants were asked for their expectations of employment and income from that employment if they did not have the BREGS job at the time. This method is unusual in the literature on the impact evalua- tion of antipoverty programs.2 Standard methods rely heavily on comparing means between those in a “treatment group” and in a “comparison group” of nonparticipants deemed to reveal the coun- terfactual. Various observational and experimental methods are used to derive the comparison group under maintained identifying assumptions. A number of evaluations of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) in 147 148 RIGHT TO WORK? various states adopt this approach (for example, Ravi and Engler 2013; Liu and Deininger 2013; Imbert and Papp 2012; and Berg and others 2012). As described in the overview, we adopt a different approach. Our method relies instead on asking participants themselves what they think they would have done in the absence of the program. If they said that they would have worked, we asked them how many days and at what wage. This approach is similar to widely used expectations surveys, in which respondents are asked for their point expectation for some event or number at some point in the future, which cannot be directly observed at present. Here we are also ask- ing about an unobserved state—the outcome in the absence of the intervention. The difference is that we are asking about a concurrent counterfactual state rather than a future state. This aspect of our methodology comes with both a benefit and a cost. The benefit is that we obtain individual-specific data on impacts. By contrast, standard impact-evaluation methods only deliver mean impacts, or at best conditional mean impacts. This benefit of our methodology facilitates quite fine distributional analysis, as required for assessing impacts on poverty. The cost is that counterfactual sub- jective questions are not always easy for respondents, although we found that, with appropriate training for interviewers, high response rates could be obtained. The overall nonresponse rates to our ques- tions on forgone income were 8 percent in the first round of the survey (R1), falling to 2 percent in the second round (R2).3 There may also be some double-counting of forgone work opportunities if different respondents have in mind the same forgone job. One of the options for respondents was “housework or own- enterprise” (typically the own-farm). For this category (grouped into one option), forgone income was assumed to be zero, on the plausible assumption that such work can be readily reallocated in time to ensure little or no forgone income. Questions about forgone work and incomes were asked for each episode of BREGS work, for each individual. The gender-specific median was then used as the household value. Missing values for forgone income were replaced with the median for the household’s stratum or the village median if it was still missing. Forgone Opportunities The nature of forgone opportunities varies considerably across work- ers and between men and women. Table 5.1 summarizes the types of activities that BREGS participants identified as being displaced by FORGONE EMPLOYMENT AND INCOME 149 Table 5.1 Forgone Work Opportunities Identified by Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Participants Round 1 Round 2 Men Women Men Women Alternative to BREGS Work (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent) Migrated for work 10.7 2.9 14.0 1.0 Worked at paid work, by type Casual work (agricultural) 22.4 24.8 19.4 23.6 Casual work (nonagricultural) 23.8 5.7 25.7 5.0 Other 1.0 0.8 2.1 0.0 Searched for work or remained unemployed 44.0 35.7 37.6 13.2 Worked on own land or house 8.8 33.1 14.9 58.2 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The questions were asked of BREGS participants by work episode. The means are formed over all work episodes such that an individual who worked more than once is also counted more than once. Would-be migrants are included in totals according to the type of activity they would have done. Data are household weighted. their BREGS work; we give results for both survey rounds and both genders. For men, about 14 percent in R2 (fewer in R1) said they would have migrated if not for BREGS; the same was true of only 1 percent of women in R2. With regard to activity, casual work in agriculture was identified as the forgone work opportunity for about 22 percent of men and 25 percent of women in R1. Casual nonfarm work was more important for men than for women. Not surpris- ingly, work on own land or in the house was the most common answer given by women. Forgone Income In estimating income from these forgone opportunities, one con- cern emerged about the responses to the questions about reported income during the period of BREGS work. About 10 percent of respondents reported forgone earnings greater than their reported earnings from public works. This is implausible, and most likely reflects a misunderstanding of the question, which is clearly not an 150 RIGHT TO WORK? easy one because it requires a counterfactual response. We trun- cated the data such that whenever the reported forgone income exceeded the earnings from PW, the forgone income was set equal to the PW earnings. However, the survey design also allows for a test of the reliabil- ity of reported forgone incomes for the main relevant activity, that is, casual work. We compare the reported month-specific forgone wage for casual work with the mean wage rate actually received by casual workers (in the week before the survey) for that same month. Sample sizes mean that the test is only feasible for May and June of 2009 and 2010. Table 5.2 gives the results. We find a fairly close correspondence between the means, and more so in R2 than R1, suggesting that there may have been some learning. (Recall also that the response rate was higher in R2.) The variance is greater for actual than for counterfactual wages. These results give us greater confidence that the counterfactual questions were understood and that the answers are sensible. Forgone Employment and Income as a Result of BREGS On average, workers had to give up work days equivalent to 40–45 percent of the total BREGS employment received. Although BREGS provided the sampled households with 18,900 person days of employment in R1, we calculate that 7,700 days of other employ- ment were given up to take on this BREGS work. In R2, 20,400 per- son days of employment were provided, but 9,300 days had to be given up. Forgone employment is higher for men than for women. In R1 the share of gross employment that was accounted for by forgone work was 0.42 for men, versus 0.36 for women. In R2, the corresponding ratios were 0.51 and 0.31. Averages mask three distinct types of BREGS participants in rela- tionship to forgone employment and income. The density functions of the ratio of self-assessed forgone days to PW days, in the left-hand panel of figure 5.1, have three distinct modes. One is around zero, which is the overall mode. These participants would not have had any days of work had they not worked on BREGS. A second mode is around 0.6, and the third and smallest mode is about 0.9. The latter beneficiaries would have worked almost as many days in non- BREGS work, possibly for a much lower wage. Forgone income tends to be slightly lower than forgone employment, reflecting the lower wages from casual work on the Table 5.2 Forgone Wages for Casual Work Compared with Actual Wages for Those Working in the Same Month Reported forgone wage for those working Casual wage received for those not working on BREGS (rupees/day) on BREGS (rupees/day) Standard Standard Mean Median deviation Observations Mean Median deviation Observations All individuals May 2009 67 70 21 49 71 70 30 418 R1 June 2009 68 70 17 32 72 70 30 571 May 2010 85 85 33 45 87 100 38 361 R2 June 2010 81 100 27 31 83 90 41 337 Men only May 2009 71 70 20 38 78 75 29 325 R1 June 2009 68 70 17 32 79 80 27 454 May 2010 96 100 29 29 96 100 36 260 R2 June 2010 90 100 23 18 95 100 37 240 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: The right-hand panel is based on responses to the question about wages actually received by casual workers in the week preceding the survey for all non-BREGS work (which could include other public works). R1 = round 1; R2 = round 2. 151 152 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 5.1 Distribution of the Ratio of Self-Assessed Forgone Days to Public Works Days and Ratio of Forgone Wages to Public Works Wages 1.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 density density 1.0 0.5 0.5 0 0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 ratio of forgone days to ratio of forgone wages to public works days public works wages round 1 round 2 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Distributions are estimated for all public works at the household level. labor market as compared with working on BREGS. The mean ratio of forgone income to PW wages is 0.35 (standard devia- tion = 0.344; observations = 930) in R1, rising to 0.39 (standard deviation = 0.392; observations = 774) in R2.4 The correspond- ing medians are 0.30 and 0.31. Density functions of the ratio of forgone income to PW wages (right-hand panel in figure 5.1) also have three distinct modes. As with days, one is around zero and is the overall mode. This represents the BREGS participants who stated that they would not have been earning income had they not worked on PW. A second mode is around 0.5, where participants would have earned about half of the earnings on PW, and the third and smallest mode is around 0.9. The latter beneficiaries would have earned an amount close to the amount earned on BREGS but possibly would have had to migrate and bear costs to do so. There may also be unobserved nonpecuniary benefits to PW that make them more desirable than alternative equally remunerated casual work. In summary, these observations suggest that forgone income is significant, though it varies considerably between workers. There are three distinct groups of participants—those for whom there is FORGONE EMPLOYMENT AND INCOME 153 no likely income loss from joining the program, those for whom there is only a small net income gain from joining the program, and an intermediate group for whom about half of the BREGS wage represents a net income gain. Impacts on Migration Table 5.1 shows that BREGS has some impact on reducing migra- tion. In R2, 14 percent of male BREGS workers stated that in the absence of that work, they would have migrated elsewhere. Com- bined across men and women, 13 percent of BREGS households said they would have migrated. These responses are a clear sign of some impact, but how big is the impact? How does it compare with the total amount of migration in Bihar? In R1, 22 percent of households had at least one member who migrated for work in the year preceding the survey. Factoring in the extra migration implied by the fact that some households that did not have any migrants would have otherwise migrated in the absence of the program, we estimate that the proportion of households with migrants would have risen to 23.3 percent (see table 5.3). In R2, the proportion of households with a migrant would have risen from 23.7 percent to 24.9 percent. We estimate that a total of 1.6 million days of migration did not occur because of BREGS, rising to 2.3 million days in R2. Thus, with- out BREGS, total migration days would have risen by 0.5 percent in Table 5.3 Migration Impact of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Round 1 Round 2 Households with at least one member who migrated in the past year (percent) 22.2 23.7 Households that did not migrate in the past year, but had at least one member who would have migrated in the absence of BREGS work (percent) 1.1 1.2 Total number of days of migration among all household members (millions) 312.7 382.0 Total number of additionall days of migration that would have occurred in the absence of BREGS work (millions) 1.6 2.3 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Household weighted. Based on BREGS participant responses to question about whether they would have migrated if not for BREGS work. 154 RIGHT TO WORK? R1 and 0.6 percent in R2. These estimates suggest that although the program is reducing migration, it is not having an impact on a large enough scale to significantly stem the flow of migrants who travel to look for work outside Bihar. Notes 1. For example, in a compilation of popular writings in broad support of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme in Khera (2011), there is only one passing reference in a footnote to the pos- sibility of forgone income. 2. For a survey of the methods found in practice, see Ravallion (2008). 3. Exploiting our survey design, we can also confirm the reliability of reported forgone incomes for the main relevant activity, that is, casual work. This is discussed later in this chapter. 4. The corresponding means without truncation are 0.63 (standard deviation = 2.31) and 0.63 (standard deviation = 2.73). However, these means are distorted by some very large outliers (reaching a forgone income of 68 times actual wage receipts from PW) that are clearly measurement errors. References Berg, Erlend, Sambit Bhattacharyya, Rajasekhar Durgam, and Manjula Ramachandra. 2012. “Can Rural Public Works Affect Agricultural Wages? Evidence from India.” Center for the Study of African Econo- mies Working Paper 2012-05, University of Oxford, U.K. Imbert, Clément, and John Papp. 2012. “Equilibrium Distributional Impacts of Government Employment Programs: Evidence from India’s Employment Guarantee.” Paris School of Economics Working Paper No. 2012 - 14. Paris School of Economics, Paris. Jha, Raghbendra, Raghav Gaiha, and Manoj K. Pandey. 2012. “Net Transfer Benefits under India’s Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme.” Journal of Policy Modeling g 34 (2): 296–311. Khera, Reetika, ed. 2011. The Battle for Employment Guarantee. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. Liu, Yanyan, and Klaus Deininger. 2013. “Welfare and Poverty Impacts of India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Evidence from Andhra Pradesh.” Policy Research Working Paper No. 6543, World Bank, Washington, DC. Murgai, Rinku, and Martin Ravallion. 2005. “Employment Guarantee in Rural India: What Would It Cost and How Much Would It Reduce Poverty?” Economic and Political Weekly, July 30, pp. 3450–55. FORGONE EMPLOYMENT AND INCOME 155 Ravallion, Martin. 1999. “Appraising Workfare.” World Bank Research Observer 14: 31–48. ———. 2008. “Evaluating Anti-Poverty Programs.” In Handbook of Devel- opment Economics, Volume 4, edited by Paul Schultz and John Strauss. Amsterdam: North-Holland. Ravi, Shamika, and Monika Engler. 2013. “Workfare as an Effective Way to Fight Poverty: The Case of India’s NREGS.” Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1336837. 6 Impacts on Poverty We can now bring together the main elements from the preced- ing chapters to derive our estimate of the impact of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) earnings on the incidence of rural poverty in Bihar. We focus mainly on quantifying the income gains to households through their participation as workers. When comparing the actual impact with simulated impacts under different scenarios, it is evident that there is a large “lost impact” on poverty from BREGS. We investigate the extent of this lost impact that is due to the unmet demand for work and due to the gap between the actual wages received and the stipulated wages. We also make some observations from the survey on respondents’ perceptions of the scheme that are relevant to its poverty impacts. Impacts on Poverty of the Extra Earnings from BREGS In estimating the impacts on poverty, we use the household-specific estimates of forgone income for men and women. The post–public works (PW) distribution of consumption is that actually observed in the data. The pre-PW distribution is derived from this by subtracting the net gains from PW, as given by gross wages less the estimated forgone income. As mentioned in Chapter 2, in estimating poverty measures for Bihar, we use the median per capita consumption level from round 1 of the survey (R1) as the poverty line and update it over time using the consumer price index for agricultural laborers to get the round 2 (R2) line. This gives poverty lines of 6,988 rupees (Rs) per person per year in R1 and Rs 7,836 in R2. However, recognizing that any poverty line is bound to be somewhat arbitrary, we also provide estimates of the poverty impacts over a wide range of potential lines. 157 158 RIGHT TO WORK? We estimate that the poverty rates (proportion of the population of Bihar living below the poverty line) among BREGS participants would have been 62.2 percent in R1 and 52.6 percent in R2 without the program. By contrast, what we observe in the data (including, of course, net earnings from the scheme) are corresponding poverty rates of 56.8 percent and 50.2 percent. Thus, we estimate that the extra earnings from the scheme reduced poverty among participants by 5.4 percentage points in R1 and 2.4 percentage points in R2. There is no reason to consider just one poverty line. The upper panel of figure 6.1 gives the observed (post-BREGS) cumulative dis- tribution function and the estimated counterfactual distribution of consumption in R1 for PW participants only. The difference between the distribution functions is plotted in the lower panel. Thus, the lower panel plots the impact on the poverty rate at a given poverty line. We call this the “poverty impact graph.” The peak reduction in the poverty rate is (coincidentally) near the R1 median.1 At about two-thirds of the median, poverty falls by about 1 percentage point, and at one-third above the median, it falls by more than 3 percentage points. (Naturally, impacts go to zero at the extremes.) Of course, the average impact is lower for the population of rural Bihar as a whole. We find that without the program, the poverty rate would have been 51.4 percent and 42.3 percent for R1 and R2, respectively. The estimated postprogram poverty rates are 50.0 percent (by construction) and 41.8 percent, respectively. Therefore, we con- clude that the scheme reduced the poverty rate in rural Bihar as a whole by 1.4 percentage points in R1 and 0.5 percentage points in R2. Figure 6.2 reproduces the poverty impact graph from the lower panel of figure 6.1 but compares it with the corresponding graph for the sample as a whole for R1 (top panel) and R2 (bottom panel). In the full sample, the impact on poverty in R1 peaks near the median, but falls off quickly on either side. In R2, the impacts on poverty peak just above the median. As noted in the previous chapter, it is possible that we have over- estimated forgone incomes, to the extent that there are overlaps in the self-reported opportunities forgone. The unemployment rate provides a clue. The Labour Bureau’s estimate of the unemployment rate for rural Bihar in 2009/10 was 18 percent, comprising 16 percent for men and 32 percent for women (Ministry of Labour and Employment 2010). While the true rate is likely to be higher in the lean season and in the absence of BREGS, a reasonably conservative upper bound is 50 percent. Therefore, as a sensitivity test, we reestimate the poverty impacts after halving reported forgone incomes on the grounds that, if the true unemployment rate were as high as 50 percent, there would only be half the number of job options available to BREGS workers as IMPACTS ON POVERTY 159 Figure 6.1 Impacts on Participants’ Poverty in Round 1 cumulative distributions of consumption with and without earnings from public works 0.8 cumulative density 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 1,000 5,000 6,988 10,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) without net earnings from public works with net earnings from public works Poverty Impact Graph 0 impact on poverty (change in CDF) –0.01 –0.02 –0.03 –0.04 1,000 5,000 6,988 10,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) Survey. Note: A smoothing parameter of 0.3 is used for all figures in this chapter. The poverty impact graph is estimated as the difference between the cumulative distribu- tion functions of consumption with and without the program. CDF = cumulative distribution function. 160 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 6.2 Poverty Impact Graph for Public Works Participants and the Whole Population Round 1 0.01 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.01 –0.02 –0.03 –0.04 –0.05 0 5,000 6,988 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) Round 2 0.01 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.01 –0.02 –0.03 –0.04 –0.05 0 5,000 7,836 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) sample as a whole public works only Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: CDF = cumulative distribution function. IMPACTS ON POVERTY 161 predicted by adding up their idiosyncratic reports on forgone work. Poverty impacts, illustrated in figure 6.3, are greater (as one would expect), but the difference is not large. In R1, the impact among PW participants at the median rises by less than 1 percentage point. The extra impact at the median is even lower in R2, but larger impacts—an extra 1–2 percentage points—are found within the region of one-third below the median to one-third above.2 Naturally, eliminating all forgone income yields even higher poverty impacts. This sensitivity test (see figure 6.4) indicates that BREGS reduced the poverty rate for R1 PW participants from 63.1 percent to 56.8 percent; instead of an impact of 5.4 percentage points with full forgone income, we estimate an impact of 6.3 percentage points. For the rural population as a whole, the R1 poverty rate fell by 1.7 percent- age points instead of 1.4 percentage points with full forgone income. In R2, without any forgone income the poverty rate for PW partici- pants would have fallen by 6.2 percentage points (from 56.4 percent to 50.2 percent) whereas it would have fallen by 1.4 percentage points in the rural population as a whole, from 43.2 percent to 41.8 percent. So even if we have substantially overestimated forgone incomes using the individual survey responses, the poverty impacts for the rural population as a whole are not considerably greater. Comparisons with Other Simulated Impacts We started this book by noting the potential for the scheme to substantially reduce poverty—by 14 percentage points in 2009. More precisely, recall that we calculate that the poverty rate in the absence of the extra earnings from BREGS would have been 51.4 percent. Giving all households that want work on the scheme 100 days at the stipulated wage rate would have brought the poverty rate down to 37.6 percent—a drop of 13.8 percentage points. This stylized version of the scheme would have had an even larger impact in R2. We esti- mate that the poverty rate (again using the 2009 median as the poverty line adjusted for inflation) in R2 would have fallen from 42.3 percent without the scheme to 27.3 percent—a 15 percentage point decline. This calculation is, of course, stylized. It assumes that every house- hold that said it wanted work on the scheme (those who actually worked on the scheme plus the excess demanders) got the full 100 days of work allowed under the legislation, no participant had to give up any other source of income to take on this work, and every partici- pant was paid the stipulated wage rates. It also assumes that other wages are unaffected. As noted in the introduction, the 100-day limit on employment means that the complete general equilibrium effects of 162 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 6.3 Poverty Impact Graph with 50 Percent Lower Forgone Income Round 1 0.02 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.02 –0.04 –0.06 0 5,000 6,988 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) Round 2 0.02 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.02 –0.04 –0.06 0 5,000 7,836 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) sample as a whole public works only Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: CDF = cumulative distribution function. IMPACTS ON POVERTY 163 Figure 6.4 Poverty Impact Graph without Forgone Income Round 1 0.02 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.02 –0.04 –0.06 0 5,000 6,988 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) Round 2 0.02 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.02 –0.04 –0.06 –0.08 0 5,000 7,836 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) sample as a whole public works only Source: Estimates based on Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: CDF = cumulative distribution function. 164 RIGHT TO WORK? the employment guarantee will not be realized, and it is difficult to say just how strong these effects would be even if there were no rationing up to the 100 day limit. Nonetheless, it would be safe to assume that without any rationing of work up to the 100 day limit, there would be spillover effects on other unskilled wage rates, which would favor the poor. A reduction of 14 percent could well be an underestimate. Figure 6.5 illustrates the impacts under this stylized scenario across the full range of potential poverty lines, for R1 and R2, respec- tively. (Naturally, impacts are even larger among the PW partici- pants, but we focus on the impacts in the population as a whole.) The 14 percentage point drop turns out to be near the maximum impact in R1, though slightly below the maximum in R2. Impacts drop off at lower or higher poverty lines. Thus, it is evident that there is a large “lost impact” on poverty of BREGS. Instead of a reduction in the poverty rate of 14 percentage points or more, we estimate that the impact is roughly 1 percentage point. As seen from the results of this study so far, none of the conditions assumed by the idealized version of BREGS holds in practice. Not all households want the 100 days (see table 2.4). But more important, there is a large unmet demand for work; even the “conditional guarantee” (subject to the 100 day limit) is not work- ing. There is also nonnegligible forgone income. And there are gaps between the wages received and those stipulated by the scheme. How much of the lost impact is due to the unmet demand for work? That is, how much greater could the impact on poverty have been if there was no unmet demand up to the 100 day limit? The seemingly low impact on poverty reflects, in part, the high propor- tion of potential workers who wanted work on the scheme but did not get it, though many of them did not require the full 100 days. Two key assumptions are made in simulating the potential impact of BREGS if the expressed demand were satisfied. First, we assume that the changes in earnings from public works implied by the ideal- ized version of BREGS are passed on fully to current consumption (that is, the earnings are not saved or invested). Second, we ignore consumption gains from the extra assets created as well as general equilibrium effects (noting that the 100 day limit makes it unclear how great a spillover effect can be expected). The days of work for households currently participating in the scheme are scaled up to equal the days they said they would have liked in the survey, up to a maximum of 100 days. We value the extra days at the average, household-specific, PW wage rate net of forgone income. Households that wanted work but did not get it are given the median of the simulated net earnings on PW for the actual participants. No changes are made for those not interested in IMPACTS ON POVERTY 165 Figure 6.5 Impacts on Poverty under Idealized Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Round 1 0.05 impact on poverty (change in CDF) 0 –0.05 –0.10 –0.15 –0.20 0 5,000 6,988 10,000 15000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) Round 2 0 impact on poverty (change in CDF) –0.05 –0.10 –0.15 –0.20 –0.25 0 5,000 7,836 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 poverty line (rupees/person/year) sample as a whole public works only Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: See text for a description of simulation assumptions. CDF = cumulative distribution function. 166 RIGHT TO WORK? participating. (We can only make this calculation for R2, in which we asked for the number of extra days desired.) We estimate that satisfying the expressed demand for work on the scheme would have decreased the poverty rate in R2 from 42.3 percent to 33.7 percent. Satisfying the unmet demand for work would have increased the scheme’s impact on poverty from about 1 percentage point to more than 8 percentage points. How much of the lost impact is due to the gap between the actual wages received and the stipulated wages (as discussed in chapter 4)? To address this question, we simply reestimate the impacts by rais- ing the wage rates actually received to the level of the stipulated wage rate for that date up to the 100 day limit, and keep all else constant. Closing this gap would have resulted in a poverty rate of 49.1 percent in R1 and 40.3 percent in R2, as compared with the preintervention rates of 51.4 percent and 42.3 percent, respectively. Thus, the wage gap accounts for about 2 percentage points of the lost impact—much less than that attributable to the unmet demand. Thus we see that more than two-thirds—about 10 percentage points—of the 15 percentage points of lost impact in R2 is attribut- able to the ways in which the scheme is not fulfilling the provisions of the Act. The rest is due to forgone income, which is hard to avoid. A second simulation allocates the same total public resources that were spent on BREGS in a different way. In calculating the cost of the scheme, we include both wage and nonwage costs from the administrative data. The precise budgets we use are Rs 858.42 per rural household in R1 and Rs 1,194.92 per rural household in R2.3 The simplest alternative is to then give every household (regardless of whether poor) these amounts—a uniform transfer—so that the total across households equals the sum of money actually spent on BREGS. This plan requires no targeting. We estimate that this would reduce the poverty rate from 51.4 percent to 49.5 percent in R1, whereas in R2 it would reduce the poverty rate from 42.3 percent to 39.1 per- cent. Both resulting poverty rates are lower than those under BREGS. This simulation assumes that there is no leakage of money from the budget for the transfers, which is unrealistic. If we make a seem- ingly generous allowance for leakage in these transfers, such that 10 percent is lost, then the poverty rates fall to 49.7 percent and 39.6 percent in R1 and R2, respectively—still an improvement in comparison with the BREGS impact.4 A third simulation of interest is to once again take the same budget but distribute it equally to all households holding a Below-Poverty- Line (BPL) card. This approach assumes that the government knows who has a BPL card (which is plausible given that they are issued by the government), but that it does not know who is really poor and IMPACTS ON POVERTY 167 how poor they are. Our calculations indicate that this alternative would reduce the poverty rate from 51.4 percent to 49.8 percent in R1, and in R2 it would reduce the poverty rate from 42.3 percent to 40.0 percent. In both cases, the poverty rates are lower than under BREGS. Poverty rates are also lower than for the uniform transfer, indicating that BPL cards are more likely to be given to those who are deemed to be poor in our data set. If we make a 10 percent allowance for leakage in the transfers, the poverty rates fall to 49.9 percent and 40.2 percent in R1 and R2, respectively.5 It is notable that the impact on poverty using an allocation of transfers based on BPL cards is only slightly greater than that calcu- lated for a uniform, untargeted allocation of the same total expen- diture. This outcome indicates that the assignment of BPL cards is only slightly more pro-poor than if they were handed out with an equal chance of anyone getting the card. Table 6.1 summarizes the various budget-neutral simulations reported above. The calculations suggest that in 2009 the extra earn- ings from BREGS had slightly less impact on poverty through the income gains to workers than would have occurred through either a uniform transfer of the same gross expenditure (to everyone, whether poor or not) or a uniform transfer to those holding a BPL card (with only a slightly larger impact in the latter case). When one allows for 10 percent leakage from the transfers, there is hardly any difference in the poverty impacts in 2009—BREGS, uniform transfers of the same budget, or transfers of the same budget to BPL card holders would all have achieved a 50 percent poverty rate, as compared with an estimated preintervention rate of 51.4 percent. However, the picture looks less favorable for BREGS in 2010. For that year, we find that the scheme would not have done as well as either of these alternatives, Table 6.1 Summary of Estimated Poverty Impacts Holding Total Public Spending Constant percentage of population below the poverty line Round 1 Round 2 Preintervention (Estimated by deducting net earnings gains from BREGS) 51.4 42.3 Postintervention BREGS (observed data) 50.0 41.8 Basic-income scheme 49.5 39.1 Basic-income scheme with 10 percent leakage 49.7 39.6 Transfers based on BPL ration cards 49.8 40.0 168 RIGHT TO WORK? which would have reduced the poverty rate by an additional 1.5– 2.0 percent points, even with a seemingly generous allowance for leakage. The scheme is clearly not justified, relative to feasible options, by its ability to transfer cash to poor people through the self-targeting mechanism. Only with sufficient asset creation benefiting poor people will the balance tilt in favor of this workfare scheme. Perceptions of BREGS We can complement this assessment of poverty impacts with per- ceptions about the scheme and general conditions in the village and their changes during the intervening year. The mean weighted shares of positive answers to perception questions included in the survey are presented by gender in table 6.2.6 The answers suggest that households are reasonably positive about their village circumstances, for which they have seen improve- ments during the survey period. More than half of all men and women in R1 and nearly two-thirds in R2 felt that infrastructure in their village had improved during the past year. A significant share (41 percent and 35 percent, respectively, of men and women in R1 and 46 percent and 42 percent in R2) felt that employment oppor- tunities increased during the past year. More than three-quarters of both men and women reported that wages had gone up. Many fewer (34 percent and 23 percent in R1 and 26 percent and 17 percent in R2) felt that there had been a reduction in short-term, work-related migration from the village. Optimism on the same issues with respect to BREGS was more muted, and in marked contrast, perceptions were that the impact of BREGS weakened between the two survey rounds.7 Only 30 percent and 28 percent of men and women, respectively, felt that BREGS had increased access to employment in R1, falling to 23 percent and 16 percent in R2. Fewer still felt that BREGS had led to a decline in work migration: approximately a fifth of men in both rounds and 23 percent and 13 percent of women for R1 and R2, respec- tively. Respondents perceived that BREGS employment was heav- ily rationed and not available to them. In R1, only 17 percent of men felt that they could get BREGS work when they asked for it during the previous year and even fewer (12 percent) did so in R2. Women are even more pessimistic: the share who felt that they could get work on a worksite, already a low 18 percent in R1, halved to 9 percent a year later. In both rounds, slightly more than half of male and female respondents trusted that BREGS would still be a source of employment in a year’s time. Table 6.2 Summary Statistics on Perception Variables Round 1 Round 2 Women Men Women Men Standard Standard Standard Standard Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation Your household: knowledge of BREGS increased in past year — — — — 0.39 0.49 0.56 0.50 Your village: infrastructure improved in past year 0.53 0.50 0.57 0.49 0.62 0.48 0.63 0.48 Your village: work increased in past year 0.35 0.48 0.41 0.49 0.42 0.49 0.46 0.50 Your village: wages increased in past year 0.79 0.41 0.83 0.38 0.74 0.44 0.78 0.42 Your village: migration decreased in past year 0.23 0.42 0.34 0.47 0.17 0.38 0.26 0.44 Your village: workers can influence wages 0.56 0.50 0.59 0.49 0.62 0.49 0.67 0.47 Your village: benefits of participating in Gram Sabha 0.15 0.36 0.22 0.42 0.14 0.34 0.22 0.42 Your village: women participate in Gram Sabha 0.24 0.43 0.29 0.45 0.36 0.48 0.42 0.49 Can get work under BREGS when demand it 0.18 0.39 0.17 0.38 0.09 0.28 0.12 0.33 BREGS projects have increased employment 0.28 0.45 0.30 0.46 0.16 0.37 0.23 0.42 BREGS decreased migration of labor 0.23 0.42 0.22 0.42 0.13 0.34 0.20 0.40 (Continued on the following page) 169 170 Table 6.2 (Continued) Round 1 Round 2 Women Men Women Men Standard Standard Standard Standard Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation BREGS work will be available in village next year 0.52 0.50 0.61 0.49 0.51 0.50 0.59 0.49 Women have right to choose BREGS projects 0.52 0.50 0.56 0.50 0.62 0.49 0.66 0.47 Assets created under BREGS are useful to women 0.46 0.50 0.47 0.50 0.82 0.38 0.80 0.40 Women work in BREGS projects 0.79 0.41 0.75 0.44 0.70 0.46 0.70 0.46 Women treated well at BREGS worksite 0.95 0.22 0.95 0.22 0.98 0.13 0.98 0.14 Women get work if they bring children to BREGS worksite 0.71 0.45 0.67 0.47 0.76 0.42 0.80 0.40 Women paid same wages as men in BREGS 0.89 0.31 0.87 0.34 0.83 0.38 0.80 0.40 Women of household would like to work on BREGS 0.43 0.49 0.42 0.49 0.46 0.50 0.43 0.50 Women of household would be allowed to work on BREGS 0.41 0.49 0.41 0.49 0.47 0.50 0.44 0.50 Source: Estimates based on Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Household-weighted, individual-level data. All perception questions require yes/no answers, where yes is coded 1 and no is coded 0. See annex table 6A.1 for summary statistics for the sample excluding BREGS participants. — = not available. Annex 6A Table 6A.1 Perceptions among Nonparticipants Male round 1 Female round 1 Male round 2 Female round 2 Standard Observa- Standard Observa- Standard Observa- Standard Obser- Variable Mean deviation tions Mean Deviation tions Mean deviation tions Mean deviation vations Your household: Knowledge of BREGS increased in past year — — — — — — 0.54 0.50 1,747 0.37 0.48 2,376 Your village: Infrastructure improved in past year 0.53 0.50 1,751 0.53 0.50 2,401 0.61 0.49 1,765 0.62 0.49 2,410 Your village: Work increased in past year 0.36 0.48 1,682 0.35 0.48 2,108 0.43 0.50 1,700 0.41 0.49 2,149 Your village: Wages increased in past year 0.82 0.39 802 0.79 0.41 955 0.77 0.42 1,709 0.74 0.44 2,212 Your village: Migration decreased in past year 0.29 0.45 794 0.22 0.42 901 0.22 0.41 1,716 0.16 0.37 2,113 Your village: Workers can influence wages 0.58 0.49 1,709 0.55 0.50 2,142 0.68 0.47 1,704 0.62 0.49 2,022 Your village: Benefits of participating in Gram Sabha 0.19 0.39 1,597 0.15 0.36 2,062 0.21 0.41 1,657 0.13 0.34 2,023 Your village: Women participate in Gram Sabha 0.28 0.45 1,641 0.23 0.42 2,180 0.39 0.49 1,673 0.35 0.48 2,149 Can get work under BREGS when demand it 0.13 0.34 1,441 0.18 0.38 1,489 0.08 0.28 1,632 0.07 0.26 1,868 BREGS projects have increased employment 0.23 0.42 1,459 0.27 0.45 1,470 0.18 0.38 1,633 0.13 0.34 1,835 171 (Continued on the following page) 172 Table 6A.1 (Continued) Male round 1 Female round 1 Male round 2 Female round 2 Standard Observa- Standard Observa- Standard Observa- Standard Obser- Variable Mean deviation tions Mean Deviation tions Mean deviation tions Mean deviation vations BREGS decreased migration of labor 0.18 0.38 1,428 0.22 0.41 1,388 0.16 0.36 1,611 0.12 0.33 1,784 BREGS work will be available in village next year 0.54 0.50 734 0.51 0.50 725 0.56 0.50 813 0.48 0.50 707 Women have right to choose BREGS projects 0.54 0.50 1,116 0.52 0.50 999 0.66 0.47 1,304 0.62 0.49 1,332 Assets created under BREGS useful to women 0.43 0.49 1,199 0.46 0.50 1,122 0.80 0.40 1,555 0.81 0.39 1,799 Women work in BREGS projects 0.70 0.46 1,423 0.77 0.42 1,501 0.67 0.47 1,601 0.68 0.47 1,899 Women treated well at BREGS worksite 0.94 0.24 930 0.95 0.22 993 0.98 0.13 973 0.98 0.13 1,016 Women get work if they bring children to BREGS worksite 0.68 0.47 771 0.73 0.45 838 0.82 0.39 878 0.77 0.42 858 Women paid same wages as men in BREGS 0.86 0.35 947 0.90 0.31 995 0.79 0.41 909 0.82 0.38 946 Women of household would like to work on BREGS 0.35 0.48 1,420 0.40 0.49 2,052 0.37 0.48 1,747 0.43 0.49 2,476 Women of household would be allowed to work on BREGS 0.34 0.47 1,416 0.38 0.49 2,031 0.37 0.48 1,747 0.43 0.50 2,462 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Household-weighted, individual-level data. All perception questions require yes/no answers, for which yes is coded 1, and no is coded 0. — = not available. IMPACTS ON POVERTY 173 Perceptions then are consistent with the findings on wages reported in chapter 4, in which we hypothesized that the observed rise in non-PW wages was attributable to the recent growth in casual off-farm employment rather than to BREGS. This seems to accord well with villagers’ own perceptions. When it comes to perceptions about the way in which women are treated on worksites, both men and women are quite positive. Three-quarters of women and just slightly fewer men agreed that women actively participate in BREGS; whereas the same propor- tions (though reversed by gender) felt that women are not penalized in getting work if they bring children to the worksite. Close to all (95–98 percent) perceived that women are treated well at worksites and close to 90 percent of women and 80 percent of men said that women are paid the same wage. Notes 1. As a consequence of the smoothing used in creating figure 6.1, the average impact at the median is slightly lower than the precise estimate at that point reported above. 2. We then find that the poverty rate for R1 (again using the R1 median) among PW participants fell from 62.8 percent to 56.8 percent as the result of BREGS—a drop of 6.0 percentage points, as compared with 5.4 percent- age points with full forgone income, as indicated by the respondents. For the rural population as a whole, the R1 poverty rate fell from 51.6 percent to 50.0 percent—a 1.6 percentage point decline, as compared with 1.4 per- centage points with full forgone income. In R2, the poverty rate for PW participants fell from 54.0 percent to 50.2 percent—a 3.8 percentage point drop, as compared with 2.4 percentage points with the full forgone income from the survey responses—while it fell from 42.6 percent to 41.8 percent in the population as a whole, representing a 0.8 percentage point decline, as compared with 0.7 percentage point with the full forgone income. 3. The administrative data indicate total expenditures of Rs 13,058 million in fiscal year 2008/09 and Rs 18,177 million for fiscal year 2009/10. These amounts were divided by our count of 152 million house- holds in rural Bihar, as implied by the survey weights. Census projections for these years gave slightly higher counts, but it is better to use our survey- based numbers for internal consistency. 4. The results are not very different if we use the estimated leakage in BREGS (assuming the discrepancy between survey responses and adminis- trative data is due to leakage to unintended beneficiaries; see table 4.5). Poverty rates fall to 49.6 percent and 39.2 percent in R1 and R2, respec- tively, for the uniform transfer. 174 RIGHT TO WORK? 5. Again, applying estimated leakage in BREGS (see chapter 5) yields very similar results. Poverty rates fall to 50.1 percent and 40.3 percent in R1 and R2, respectively, with a Below Poverty Line–targeted uniform transfer. 6. This uses the entire sample of individuals interviewed in each round. We also calculated the summary statistics for the sample of interviewed individuals from households in which both a man and a woman were inter- viewed in either round. The results were very similar, so we only report the results for the full sample. 7. It is interesting to note that this optimism holds in the sample of nonparticipants, though less so than in the full sample (that is, including participants). See annex table 6A.1. Reference Ministry of Labour and Employment. 2010. Report on Employment and Unemployment Survey (2009–10). Chandigarh: Government of India. 7 Reforming the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Citizen Awareness The rights-based, demand-driven nature of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) and its decentralized, participatory approach are two core aspects of the scheme that set it apart from previous public works schemes in India. These aspects of the scheme introduce new challenges in delivery, including developing mechanisms to register demand for work. This chapter uses the quantitative and qualitative work done for this study to assess how the demand-side processes are working, how aware people are of those processes and their rights under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (the Act, or NREGA), why some people are more knowledgeable about the scheme than others, and how policy makers can improve knowledge. Registration and Expressing Demand for Work To participate, the Act requires that households must first register and get a job card (see the overview). In round 2 (R2) of the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey, 42 percent of rural households had been issued job cards, up from 34 percent in round 1 (R1) of the survey (see table 7.1).1 Households without job cards are less likely to get work on the scheme. In both sur- vey rounds, 40 percent of male and about a third of female excess demanders reported the lack of a job card as the reason for not getting work. At the same time, there are a few households (but a 175 176 RIGHT TO WORK? Table 7.1 Not All Households That Want a Job Card Have One Round 1 Round 2 (percent) (percent) Households with job cards 34.2 42.2 Among households without job cards: Households that are in the process of obtaining a job card 26.0 5.0 Households that want, applied for, but have not gotten the card 33.4 39.6 Reason: no acquaintance with officials 59.2 37.9 Reason: perceive discrimination by officials 29.3 46.7 Reason: without BPL card 3.9 4.0 Reason: with disabled members 2.3 1.6 Reason: cannot afford 2.5 6.0 Households that want but have not applied 11.9 19.3 Reason: unaware of application process 49.0 73.1 Reason: perceive application process too lengthy 10.8 7.2 Reason: perceive unlikely to obtain 20.2 8.1 Reason: deterred by lack of BPL card 11.2 1.2 Reason: deterred by disability 6.4 5.9 Households that do not want 28.7 35.9 Reason: do not need work 30.1 20.5 Reason: deterred by disability 6.2 15.2 Reason: deterred by other program featuresa 63.7 64.3 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Households with missing values are excluded from the sample. BPL = Below Poverty Line. a. These households were not interested in the type of work, or felt the stipulated wage was too low or the number of days available too few. declining share) that say they do not have a job card but also report getting work on the scheme. We find that 7.8 percent of households without a job card in R1 got work on the scheme, falling to 3.8 per- cent in R2. However (as noted in box 7.1), we cannot rule out the possibility that some of those interviewed were unaware that they had a job card. In both years, one in five households reported not receiving a job card even after applying for it. Lack of local contacts and discrimi- nation by functionaries were perceived to be key reasons in both years, with the proportion reporting the latter reason increasing to 47 percent from 29 percent between the two years. Qualitative research indicates that caste and electoral politics may have a role to play in this process (Sunai 2009). Reports for Bihar and other REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 177 Box 7.1 Are the Transparency Safeguards Adhered To in Practice? The job card is an important transparency safeguard; it is supposed to serve as a complete record of adult household members (with pho- tographs) and of all scheme-related activity by the household mem- bers. In practice, qualitative research for this report and other field studies suggest that this function is not yet being served. Poor knowl- edge of processes as well as high levels of illiteracy among Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) workers exacerbates the problem. An encouraging finding is that the majority (two-thirds) of job card holders in Bihar have the card in their own possession. This is the first step in ensuring transparency. However, this still leaves nearly a third of job card holders reporting that their card is held by the Mukhiya or other panchayat members and officials (panchayat rozgar sewak, postmaster, and the like). But one-third may be a lower bound; qualitative research suggests that households may be unaware that job cards have been issued in their name and are in the possession of a middleman or functionary. Administrative data indicate that 61 per- cent (74 percent) of rural households were issued job cards in 2008/09 (2009/10), whereas only 34 percent (42 percent) of households in the BREGS survey reported possession of a job card in approximately the same period. The same research also indicates that passbooks for workers’ bank and post office accounts are often held by scheme func- tionaries or the Mukhiya, leaving room for manipulation and misuse. We also find that job cards are poorly maintained. The majority of households report that their job cards list at least one adult member, but about 29 percent in round 1 of the survey said their cards do not have the photographs of all listed members. Though job cards and photographs are supposed to be issued free of charge, in both rounds, only about a quarter of job card holders obtained theirs without pay- ment. The rest paid between 40 and 50 rupees, on average. Qualita- tive research suggests that scheme functionaries often charge for the photographs. In addition, records of work applications, days worked, and wages paid are often not made in the job cards. For instance, when asked about payments received at the last worksite at which they worked, 24 percent of men and 38 percent of women workers did not even know if this information was recorded in the job card. Only 29 percent of men and 25 percent of women workers reported that payments received were recorded in their job cards. Source: Authors’ calculations from the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey; Indian Grameen Services 2010; Development Alter- natives 2009; and Sunai 2009. 178 RIGHT TO WORK? northern states have also emphasized the specific barriers faced by women, for example, in getting their names on job cards (Khera and Nayak 2009). Among those who wanted a job card but had not yet applied for one, the main deterrents were a lack of knowledge about the application process, the perception that it was lengthy, and they thought that they would not get a job card even if they were to apply for it (see table 7.1). We find that the knowledge of rights, and equally important, information about the processes by which to access these rights, remains low, and more so among women (more on this below). In particular, the notion of “demanding” and applying for work is still in its infancy.2 We find that only a quarter of male (and only 16 per- cent of female) workers in the sample had actually demanded work at the last worksite at which they worked in R1 (see table 7.2). The rest had simply come to the worksite when it opened, or obtained work through village leaders (including the Mukhiya), scheme func- tionaries, or even contractors. An encouraging trend is the increase in the proportion demanding work in the second survey round, par- ticularly among female workers. Women said that they were often turned away from worksites if they came for work without a husband or male relative. It is unclear how widespread this practice is. But the R1 survey indicates that 23 percent of women workers who applied for work at the last BREGS worksite at which they worked did so with their husbands Table 7.2 Notion of “Demanding” Work Is Weak but Improving Round 1 Round 2 Way in Which Work Was Obtained Men Women Men Women Asked for work 25.2 16.3 40.5 33.8 Came to worksite 11.8 10.6 11.8 17.1 Called for work by contractor 9.2 14.0 13.2 13.5 Called for work by panchayat rozgar sewak 9.4 14.8 7.0 4.7 Called for work by Mukhiya or Gram Panchayat member 41.1 36.0 26.3 19.6 Other 3.1 7.3 0.2 11.1 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on responses by workers in the surveyed households to the question of how work was obtained at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked. Observa- tions with missing values (workers that did not respond to the question) are excluded from the sample. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 179 and 52 percent applied as part of a group. It was more common for men (60 percent in R1, but falling to 35 percent in R2) to apply indi- vidually for work. Applications as part of a group were even more common in R2 (70 percent for women and 58 percent for men). Qualitative research also corroborates that many villagers believe that work will be provided when it is available (that is, not necessar- ily on demand). In some cases, the Mukhiya, the panchayat rozgar sewak (PRS), or other scheme functionaries inform potential work- ers that work will be available when a worksite is opened. The per- ception of Mukhiyas and PRSs is that many people do not formally demand work because they are used to a contractor-based system wherein work is allocated rather than demanded (Sunai 2009). There is little awareness that the right to employment is a uni- versal right for rural households and not limited to specific groups. As a consequence, potential applicants can be excluded based on certain characteristics (for example, widowhood, gender, old age, and disability) or a lack of documentation (for instance, a Below- Poverty-Line [BPL] ration card). We find that although 11 percent of households perceived the lack of a BPL card to be a deterrent to applying for a job card in 2008/09, fewer than 2 percent con- tinued to think so in 2009/10.3 Another small share of households (6 percent in both rounds) cited disability as the reason for lack of interest in the scheme or for not applying for or getting a job card. Although public works schemes are typically designed for able- bodied individuals, some states have made greater efforts to extend the scheme to persons with disabilities.4 We find little sign that this has happened in Bihar, however. There is also some anecdotal evidence that women are discour- aged from participating because of a perception that they are less productive. Information campaigns need to stress that all adults are eligible for the scheme and that potential workers need to demand work, individually or collectively, to get it. And it is crucial that such campaigns be designed keeping in mind the high levels of illiteracy in rural Bihar. There is also a need to specifically mobilize weaker groups to encourage their participation in the scheme. What Do Rural Households Know about BREGS? The surveyed individuals were asked whether they knew about the existence of BREGS, and if so, they were given 12 questions aimed at testing their knowledge of the scheme’s functioning, as well as about their rights under the Act. Table 7.3 provides the mean of correct responses for each of the questions by gender and survey Table 7.3 Summary Statistics of Knowledge of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Rules 180 Round 1 Round 2 Women Men Women Men Standard Standard Standard Standard Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation A. Full sample Heard Has heard of BREGS 0.73 0.44 0.95 0.21 0.88 0.33 0.98 0.15 Score 1 Employment knowledge score 1.51 1.52 2.60 1.88 2.10 1.56 3.14 1.83 Days Knows entitled to 100 or thinks 90 daysa 0.11 0.31 0.37 0.48 0.13 0.34 0.38 0.49 Gender Knows both men and women can demand work 0.51 0.50 0.57 0.50 0.62 0.49 0.68 0.47 BPL Knows non-BPL families can demand work 0.38 0.48 0.53 0.50 0.57 0.49 0.69 0.46 Work lag Knows work to be provided within 15 days 0.02 0.13 0.06 0.25 0.07 0.26 0.14 0.34 Unemployment Knows about unemployment allowance allowance 0.11 0.32 0.29 0.45 0.22 0.42 0.41 0.49 Wage rate Knows wage rate 0.21 0.41 0.44 0.50 0.26 0.44 0.45 0.50 Wage lag Knows wages to be paid within 2 weeks 0.08 0.27 0.12 0.32 0.10 0.30 0.14 0.35 Contractor Knows contractors not allowed 0.11 0.32 0.24 0.43 0.13 0.34 0.27 0.44 Score 2 Facilities knowledge score 0.98 1.29 1.39 1.41 1.12 1.20 1.55 1.29 Child care Knows of child care facilities 0.19 0.39 0.19 0.39 0.12 0.32 0.18 0.38 Water Knows of drinking water facilities 0.42 0.49 0.59 0.49 0.53 0.50 0.67 0.47 Shade Knows of shade facilities 0.21 0.40 0.36 0.48 0.38 0.48 0.51 0.50 First aid Knows of first aid facilities 0.18 0.38 0.26 0.44 0.10 0.30 0.20 0.40 Board Knows of information board — — — — 0.01 0.11 0.06 0.23 Demand Knows work has to be demanded — — — — 0.52 0.50 0.74 0.44 B. Individuals in households in which a man and a woman were interviewed Heard Has heard of BREGS 0.72 0.45 0.96 0.20 0.87 0.34 0.98 0.15 Score 1 Employment knowledge score 1.57 1.57 2.60 1.88 2.17 1.58 3.16 1.83 Days Knows entitled to 100 or thinks 90 daysa 0.12 0.32 0.37 0.48 0.14 0.35 0.39 0.49 Gender Knows both men and women can demand work 0.51 0.50 0.56 0.50 0.64 0.48 0.69 0.46 BPL Knows non-BPL families can demand work 0.39 0.49 0.53 0.50 0.58 0.49 0.68 0.47 Work lag Knows work is to be provided within 15 days 0.02 0.14 0.06 0.24 0.08 0.27 0.13 0.34 Unemployment Knows about unemployment allowance allowance 0.13 0.33 0.29 0.45 0.23 0.42 0.41 0.49 Wage rate Knows wage rate 0.22 0.42 0.44 0.50 0.28 0.45 0.46 0.50 Wage lag Knows wages to be paid within 2 weeks 0.09 0.29 0.12 0.32 0.10 0.30 0.14 0.35 Contractor Knows contractors not allowed 0.13 0.33 0.24 0.43 0.13 0.34 0.27 0.44 (Continued on the following page) 181 182 Table 7.3 (Continued) Round 1 Round 2 Women Men Women Men Standard Standard Standard Standard Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation Mean deviation Score 2 Facilities knowledge score 1.02 1.30 1.40 1.40 1.15 1.21 1.55 1.29 Child care Knows of child care facilities 0.19 0.39 0.19 0.39 0.13 0.33 0.18 0.39 Water Knows of drinking water facilities 0.44 0.50 0.59 0.49 0.53 0.50 0.67 0.47 Shade Knows of shade facilities 0.22 0.41 0.36 0.48 0.39 0.49 0.51 0.50 First aid Knows of first aid facilities 0.18 0.39 0.25 0.44 0.11 0.31 0.20 0.40 Board Knows of information board — — — — 0.02 0.12 0.06 0.23 Demand Knows work has to be demanded — — — — 0.50 0.50 0.73 0.44 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Household weighted. Approximate sample sizes: Panel A, “Heard of BREGS”: N = 2,800 for women; N = 2,300 for men; N = 2,000 for remaining ques- tions; Panel B, “Heard of BREGS”: N = 2,000; Women round 1: N = 1,500; N = 2,000 for remaining questions. Questions about the information board and having to demand work were not asked in round 1. Score 1, the “employment knowledge score,” is an overall measure of knowledge about the scheme’s employment aspects, based on the number of correct answers to the eight employment-related questions. Score 2, the “facilities knowledge score,” is an overall measure of knowledge of the facilities and amenities that BREGS mandates must be provided at worksites (child care, drinking water, shade, and first aid kits). BPL = Below Poverty Line; — = not available. a. A response of “3 months” or “90 days” is treated as a correct response to the question on number of days of worked. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 183 round. We provide the weighted summary statistics for two samples: all interviewed individuals in panel A of table 7.3 and all those from households in which both a man and a woman were interviewed in panel B. (The questionnaire first asked individuals whether they had heard about BREGS. If they answered no, the rest of the awareness questions were skipped for those individuals. Note that the means presented in table 7.3 simply treat these as missing observations rather than including them as zeroes.) We find knowledge of the details of the scheme to be very low and lower for women than for men.5 Most men and three-quarters of women had heard about the program by R1, but many were unaware of their precise rights and entitlements under BREGS. The level of understanding of how to go about obtaining work is clearly low. For example, 37 percent of men and 11 percent of women knew that households can work up to 100 days per year; 57 percent and 51 percent (respectively) knew that both men and women can work; 53 percent and 38 percent that a household need not have a BPL ration card to be eligible; 6 percent and 2 percent that work should be provided within 15 days of having demanded it; 44 percent and 21 percent knew what wage should be paid, and 12 percent and 8 percent that it should be paid within two weeks; and only 24 percent and 11 percent that contractors are not allowed on the scheme. The R1 questionnaire did not contain a question about whether the individual knows work must be demanded. However, in R2, 74 percent of men and 52 percent of women answered the question correctly. The only awareness question for which there was no gap between men and women concerned the provision for child care, which 19 percent of all individuals knew about. As an overall measure of knowledge about the scheme’s employ- ment aspects, we use the number of correct answers to the eight employment-related questions. We call this the “employment knowledge score,” or “Score 1” for short. This gives averages of 2.6 for men and 1.5 for women out of a maximum of 8. A second measure was created for awareness of the facilities and amenities that BREGS mandates must be provided at worksites (child care, drinking water, shade, and first aid kits). Respondents were asked to identify what facilities were supposed to be provided. The mean number of correct answers was 1.4 and 1.0 out of a maximum of 4 for men and women, respectively. We refer to this as the “facilities knowledge score” (“Score 2”). As can be seen in table 7.3, knowledge of entitlements and BREGS procedures improved with time. The average employment knowl- edge score increased to 3.1 for men and 2.1 for women between 184 RIGHT TO WORK? rounds 1 and 2, while the facilities knowledge score rose to 1.6 and 1.1, respectively. But these are clearly not large increases. Table 7.4, column 1, shows the marginal effects of various individual, household, and village attributes on whether an individual has heard about BREGS. This regression uses all individual observa- tions for R1. Higher educational attainment at the secondary level and above has a significantly positive effect on awareness of the scheme, as does male gender. We also collected data to calibrate an individual- specific version of the Pearlin Mastery scale, which is a measure of the extent to which individuals perceive themselves in control of factors that affect their lives. We find that the Pearlin scale has a sig- nificant positive effect for women but not for men.6 Being married, or widowed or divorced, as opposed to unmarried, significantly reduces the probability of having heard about BREGS. Household-level characteristics that are correlated with higher participation in the scheme (see chapter 3) also have a significant positive impact on knowledge. These characteristics include having male and female household members who have engaged in casual work, being from the Mahadalit caste or of the Hindu religion, being related to the ward member or other panchayat member, and having voted in the panchayat election. In contrast, higher wealth as mea- sured by the assets index (as used in chapter 3) and land holdings tend to reduce the likelihood of having heard about BREGS. The scheme is clearly less relevant to wealthier groups. The fact that they know less about the scheme suggests that this type of knowledge is not public knowledge. Conditional on individual and household characteristics, the attributes of a respondent’s village of residence have considerable explanatory power. We find that knowledge is lower in villages that are more unequal (based on distribution of assets). Living in an elec- trified village that is within five kilometers of the Gram Panchayat or block headquarters also appears to negatively affect knowledge of BREGS. Larger shares of Scheduled Caste households and ones with kutcha houses also have a strong positive effect, as does having a panchayat bhawan, a post office, and access to nonagricultural enterprises within five kilometers of the village. The characteristics of the Mukhiya also emerge as important. A male Mukhiya has a positive effect on knowledge; a Mukhiya employed in agricultural pursuits has a significant negative effect on whether villagers have heard of BREGS. The regression also tests for whether active associations in the village has an effect. We separately control for the presence of women’s self-help groups (SHGs), and civil society organizations Table 7.4 Regression for Knowledge of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Rules in Round 1 Unemployment Heard Days Gender BPL allowance Wage rate Contractor (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Individual characteristics Age 0.005 0.010** 0.005 0.005 0.000 0.003 0.006* Age squared −0.000 −0.000*** −0.000 −0.000 −0.000 −0.000 −0.000* Education Literate (< class 5) 0.005 0.061*** 0.033 −0.021 0.062*** 0.015 0.025 Class 5 pass (primary) 0.014 0.022 −0.046 −0.011 0.048 −0.035 0.015 Class 8 pass (middle) 0.009 0.074** −0.087** 0.032 0.033 0.006 0.052* Class 10 pass (secondary) 0.100*** 0.115*** −0.017 0.022 0.128*** 0.044 0.041 Class 12 pass (higher secondary) 0.151*** 0.070 −0.126* 0.065 0.103* 0.012 0.056 More than higher secondary 0.149*** 0.174** −0.030 0.074 0.136* −0.016 0.055 Household head 0.035 0.038 0.024 0.042 0.037 0.078** 0.008 Spouse of household head 0.008 −0.010 0.001 0.025 0.009 0.060 0.034 Married −0.077*** −0.048 0.002 −0.095* 0.039 −0.050 0.083** Widowed or divorced −0.084** −0.043 −0.029 −0.118* 0.032 −0.010 0.125*** Male gender 0.240*** 0.183*** −0.003 0.198*** 0.117*** 0.115** 0.145*** Pearlin index interacted with (male) 0.005 0.001 0.018** −0.000 0.001 0.020*** 0.005 Pearlin index interacted with (female) 0.020*** 0.004 0.001 0.009 −0.001 0.009 0.014*** (Continued on the following page) 185 186 Table 7.4 (Continued) Unemployment Heard Days Gender BPL allowance Wage rate Contractor (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Household characteristics ln (household size) 0.092 −0.128* −0.043 −0.056 0.043 −0.140 0.099* ln (household size) squared −0.032* 0.028 0.014 0.034 −0.018 0.043 −0.023 Share of male adults −0.043 0.019 0.010 0.115* 0.075 −0.066 0.065 Share of female adults 0.035 −0.057 −0.032 0.046 0.036 0.015 0.017 Share of elderly −0.066 0.021 0.010 −0.082 0.141 −0.024 0.065 Share of children younger than age 6 0.014 0.089* 0.088 0.056 −0.005 0.001 0.005 Male household head −0.018 0.049* −0.013 0.001 0.021 0.061** −0.012 Age of household head 0.000 −0.008** 0.004 −0.002 −0.003 −0.003 −0.005 Age of household head squared 0.000 0.000** −0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 Maximum education in household Literate (< class 5) 0.020 0.029 −0.051** −0.026 −0.009 0.023 −0.012 Class 5 pass (primary) −0.005 0.022 −0.048 −0.028 0.007 −0.002 −0.003 Class 8 pass (middle) −0.001 0.040 0.032 −0.008 0.035 0.046 0.007 Class 10 pass (secondary) −0.044* −0.004 −0.104*** −0.045 −0.001 0.005 −0.064** Class 12 pass (higher secondary) −0.073** 0.081** −0.032 −0.101** −0.018 −0.012 −0.016 More than higher secondary −0.052 0.167*** 0.037 −0.035 0.039 0.045 0.096* Social group Scheduled Caste 0.032 0.015 0.044 0.007 −0.022 0.001 −0.050* Mahadalit 0.068*** 0.043 −0.009 0.011 0.025 0.087** −0.024 Other Backward Class 0.019 −0.042* 0.040 −0.004 −0.050** −0.029 −0.057** Scheduled Tribe 0.021 −0.065 0.000 0.039 0.047 −0.036 −0.038 Hindu 0.067*** 0.051** 0.086*** 0.046 0.013 0.080*** 0.040* Asset-house index −0.006* 0.005 −0.009 −0.005 0.006 0.004 0.001 Asset-house index squared 0.000 −0.002 0.001 −0.004* −0.000 0.001 0.001 Asset-house index cubed 0.000 0.000 −0.000 0.001** −0.000 −0.000 0.000 Land owned −0.021* 0.001 0.035** 0.024 −0.001 0.017 −0.010 Land owned squared 0.002 −0.002 −0.002 −0.002 −0.001 −0.001 0.000 BPL ration card 0.018 −0.014 0.004 0.034* 0.009 0.017 −0.005 Know Mukhiya or Sarpanch of panchayat 0.020 0.053*** 0.025 0.122*** 0.068*** 0.066*** 0.051*** Know ward member or other panch leader 0.021* 0.044*** −0.006 −0.016 0.035** 0.042** 0.034** Know program officer or block development officer −0.018 −0.045 0.023 0.056 0.144* 0.093 0.022 Know any political worker −0.025 0.081 0.103** −0.041 −0.059 −0.027 −0.031 Household voted in panchayat election 0.040* 0.087*** 0.045 0.027 0.046* 0.091*** −0.014 Household suffered a shock in past year Accident −0.009 0.001 −0.040** −0.008 −0.015 0.022 0.010 Illness 0.030 0.030 0.024 0.039 0.059** 0.033 0.035 Job loss 0.018 0.002 0.088*** 0.043 −0.048* 0.029 0.006 (Continued on the following page) 187 188 Table 7.4 (Continued) Unemployment Heard Days Gender BPL allowance Wage rate Contractor (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Natural disaster −0.003 0.066*** −0.022 0.014 0.041** 0.066*** 0.052*** Other −0.002 −0.026 −0.059* 0.045 0.024 0.019 0.034 Men in household do casual work 0.066*** 0.028 0.010 0.003 −0.015 0.071*** −0.007 Women in household do casual work 0.036*** −0.001 0.002 −0.002 −0.023 0.017 −0.002 No male migration −0.012 0.038*** −0.012 0.039** −0.011 0.033** −0.021* Regular-salaried worker in household −0.028 0.061 0.009 −0.000 0.085** 0.035 0.006 Village and GP characteristics GP has a panchayat bhawan 0.026** −0.000 0.008 0.067*** 0.051*** −0.016 −0.002 Mukhiya’s age −0.001 −0.000 −0.004*** −0.001 0.002*** 0.002** −0.000 Mukhiya lives in village 0.019 0.061*** 0.005 0.046** 0.003 0.002 −0.004 Mukhiya is male 0.031** 0.015 0.089*** 0.061*** 0.029* −0.036* −0.001 Mukhiya completed class 5 −0.035** 0.017 0.111*** −0.012 0.012 −0.003 −0.050*** Mukhiya is a farmer −0.042*** −0.058*** −0.124*** −0.046** −0.018 −0.029 0.029* Mukhiya held a GP post in the past 0.022 −0.018 0.013 −0.029 −0.034* −0.041* −0.028 Mukhiya’s family held a GP post in the past 0.002 −0.029 0.034 0.002 −0.025 −0.067*** 0.013 Mukhiya is a contractor −0.020 −0.060 −0.107* −0.163*** −0.001 0.059 0.033 Listing: share of SC households 0.086*** 0.113** −0.045 0.025 0.124*** −0.005 −0.070* Listing: share of OBC households −0.014 −0.001 −0.146*** −0.099** 0.044 −0.032 −0.016 Village is predominantly Hindu 0.025 −0.010 0.024 −0.012 0.016 0.020 0.006 Village is electrified −0.029** −0.012 0.032* 0.034* 0.024* −0.003 0.004 Village has a pucca road −0.020 −0.040** −0.072*** −0.041** −0.025 −0.017 −0.009 Within 5 km of bus stop 0.000 0.087*** −0.004 0.014 −0.010 0.023 0.043*** Within 5 km of GP −0.044*** 0.025 0.145*** 0.037 0.058*** 0.010 −0.023 Within 5 km of town −0.000 −0.030 0.063** −0.009 −0.019 0.029 0.033 Within 5 km of block headquarters −0.057*** −0.015 −0.082*** −0.069*** −0.013 0.027 −0.040** Post office in village 0.036*** −0.015 −0.061*** 0.012 −0.006 0.042** −0.044*** Nonagricultural enterprises within 5 km of village 0.072*** −0.057** −0.079*** 0.009 0.024 −0.084*** 0.016 ln(mean asset index in village) 0.024 0.058 −0.288*** 0.124** 0.060 0.045 −0.067* Asset inequality in village −0.394*** −0.558*** −0.543*** −0.658*** −0.387*** −0.374*** −0.157 Listing: share households with kutcha house 0.139*** 0.067 −0.114** 0.162*** −0.148*** 0.091* 0.046 Listing: share BPL households −0.026 0.130*** 0.087 0.065 0.092** 0.184*** −0.021 Flood in village in past year 0.058*** −0.038** −0.100*** −0.052*** −0.036** −0.052*** −0.050*** Drought in village in past year 0.039*** 0.023 0.069*** 0.059*** −0.020 −0.055*** 0.050*** Any shock in village in past year −0.055*** −0.057** 0.001 0.022 −0.015 0.008 −0.005 (Continued on the following page) 189 190 Table 7.4 (Continued) Unemployment Heard Days Gender BPL allowance Wage rate Contractor (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Good relations among village social groups −0.008 −0.022 0.043 0.073** 0.020 0.059** 0.053*** Self-help group in village −0.039*** −0.038** −0.085*** −0.110*** −0.044*** −0.026 0.012 Civil society organization in village −0.016 0.024 0.036* 0.011 0.019 0.069*** −0.007 BREGS Vigilance Committee in village 0.031** −0.001 −0.074*** −0.050** 0.016 −0.005 −0.007 Other associations in village −0.031* −0.064*** −0.068*** −0.029 −0.020 0.010 −0.009 Observations 4,792 3,977 4,000 3,991 3,994 3,974 3,985 R2 0.185 0.158 0.105 0.098 0.130 0.128 0.086 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Round 1 data. If individual had not heard about BREGS, answers to other questions were coded as missing. Full definitions of each knowledge question are given in table 7.3. The omitted education category is illiterate. BPL = Below Poverty Line; GP = Gram Panchayat; km = kilometers; OBC = Other Backward Class; SC = Scheduled Caste. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 191 (CSOs) that specifi cally focus on the Act, an NREGA Village Vigilance Committee (NVVC), and others (comprising farmers, laborers, trade, caste groups, and agricultural or milk cooperative societies). Some 45 percent of villages in the sample have at least one women’s SHG, only 22 percent have active BREGS-related CSOs, and 77 percent an NVVC. The other groups are generally individually much less common, although 84 percent of villages have at least one that is active. People in villages with a women’s SHG and “other” groups are less likely to have heard about the scheme, perhaps because the presence of these groups reduces their need for BREGS. Those in villages with an NVVC are more likely to have heard of BREGS. Having a BREGS-related CSO appears to have no bearing on whether people have heard about the scheme. The columns from 2 onward in table 7.4 present the probit estimates for whether individuals answered each of the specific knowledge questions correctly in R1. (We dropped the questions with which respondents were least familiar to save space.) As noted above, if an individual stated that he or she had not heard of BREGS, none of the knowledge questions were asked, and a zero was entered for each of the subsequent knowledge questions. This raises the pos- sibility of selection bias with respect to the sample of individuals who had heard of BREGS and answered the questions. However, the tests did not suggest that this was likely to be a problem.7 We therefore conclude that the people who said that they did not know about BREGS are not systematically different from those who said they did. We exclude them and run the probits only for those who answered the specific knowledge questions. Many of the attributes that determined whether individuals had heard of BREGS (male gender, higher levels of education, the gender-specific Pearlin scales, being Hindu, political connections— knowing the Mukhiya, Sarpanch, ward member, or panch, and having voted—as well as attributes of the Mukhiya and of the village) also influenced knowledge of the various aspects of the scheme. As with the “heard of BREGS” question, the level of asset inequal- ity in the village has a strong negative effect on the level of aware- ness in almost all cases. Having suffered a household-level shock from a natural disaster tends to raise knowledge. Natural disas- ters at the village level also result in more people knowing about BREGS. However, the direction of the effect on knowledge about the scheme’s details depends on the shock. Floods tend to signifi- cantly reduce knowledge whereas droughts have the opposite effect. This outcome may reflect the reality that BREGS worksites tend 192 RIGHT TO WORK? to be impossible to set up in times of flooding and that the scheme closes down during the rainy season, leading to fewer opportunities to learn about the scheme. It is interesting that the only cases in which there is no significant male knowledge advantage concerns the questions about whether women are equally welcome to participate and whether child care is provided. The only case in which BPL household status has a statistically significant (and positive) effect is for the question con- cerning whether eligibility requires that one be a BPL household. These findings suggest that people retain information about issues that specifically concern them and matter to them. Living in a village that reports good relations between different village groups significantly raises the probability of correct answers on a number of knowledge questions; being from a village with active CSOs positively affects knowledge about the wage rate but negatively affects that concerning the scheme’s mandated worksite facilities. However, the presence of a women’s SHG consistently sig- nificantly reduces awareness. If these groups are dispensing micro- credit to women, they might have a reduced need to know about the scheme. Alternatively, the finding may reflect that women’s groups locate where there is the most pressing need for them, that is, where knowledge is lower. Intrahousehold Gender Differences in Knowledge It is apparent from the above discussion that men and women have different perceptions about their circumstances, as well as dispa- rate levels of awareness about BREGS, and do not necessarily share information within the household. When we limit the sample to households in which members of both genders were interviewed, we find the gender gap in knowledge declines, but the differences are negligible. Table 7.3, panel B presents the means of correct answers for the different knowledge questions for men and women separately in this sample. A comparison with the means in panel A shows that with some exceptions, awareness is somewhat higher for both gen- ders and the percentage difference between them slightly reduced. The mean knowledge gap calculated over the 12 questions decreases to 0.123 from 0.132. A regression on this reduced sample reveals that the coefficient on male gender remains positive and significant for all knowledge questions and is actually larger conditional on individual, household, and village characteristics.8 Thus, the con- ditional mean difference in knowledge favors men even more than does the unconditional mean. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 193 We also estimated separate male and female knowledge regres- sions for individuals in households in which a member of the oppo- site sex was also interviewed. The regressions controlled for the male or female individual’s own characteristics as well as those of the other surveyed individual’s characteristics, and household and vil- lage attributes as before. We found some interesting differences between the male and female estimates. More education and higher Pearlin scores have similar effects on knowledge. More education from secondary schooling on increases the probability that women have heard of the scheme but does not do so for men. When significant, the effects of education are always positive for women; in contrast, more edu- cation for men is a mixed blessing from the point of view of getting the BREGS knowledge questions right. For example, progressively more education relative to being illiterate is significantly associated with progressively higher probabilities by men of erroneously believ- ing that women are not allowed to work on BREGS. Yet, educa- tion levels higher than middle school for the interviewed woman in the same household helps him answer this same question correctly. More years of schooling of the interviewed woman tends to be asso- ciated with greater knowledge on the man’s part. The opposite is true with respect to women’s knowledge. Their fellow male house- hold member’s education tends to negatively affect their knowledge when it matters at all. Similarly, a higher score on the Pearlin scale significantly influ- ences women’s knowledge of their rights but has far less effect on men’s awareness. Indeed, men’s higher Pearlin score leads them to erroneously think that the household needs to have a BPL card to participate in BREGS. Furthermore, a higher Pearlin score for the interviewed female has a positive effect on the male interviewee’s knowledge but not vice versa. A positive effect of the household’s share of children under age six on knowledge of the mandated requirement that water be provided at work sites is significant only for women. Being close to the Mukhiya is equally important for men and women in determining knowledge. For men, there are also signifi- cant positive effects of being close to the ward member and from voting in the elections. Neither effect is apparent for women. The household’s having faced a shock related to a natural disaster sig- nificantly heightens men’s knowledge of multiple aspects of BREGS but not women’s. On the whole, village characteristics appear to influence knowledge similarly for men and women, conditional on household and individual characteristics. 194 RIGHT TO WORK? To summarize the above discussion of the determinants of knowledge, we find certain factors to be consistently important. At the individual and household levels, one can think of these as fall- ing roughly into two categories of attributes—those that enhance a person’s knowledge and understanding, and those that render the information more relevant and meaningful to those individuals. In the first category, higher levels of education and higher scores on the Pearlin scale are dependably significant attributes that help indi- viduals process and retain information. Political connections create opportunities to access the work that an individual may not have otherwise and in that sense will also help people take on information that may concern them. Being from the Mahadalit caste (typically the most disadvantaged), or being from a household whose members have engaged in casual work in the past, has a low level of wealth, and has suffered a shock, fall in the second category of attributes that make knowledge about BREGS vital to one’s household’s well- being. Male gender, given men’s responsibility as main breadwin- ners, can also be seen to fit this category. In addition, a number of village-level characteristics that may largely reflect supply-side issues also emerge as very important. High asset inequality is negatively associated with knowledge; having a panchayat bhawan and cer- tain characteristics of the Mukhiya, such as if he lives in the village, increase knowledge whereas others, such as the Mukhiya being a farmer or landowner, tend to reduce it. A Pilot Information Campaign In the present setting, it may be that people are too unaware of their rights or of how to demand their rights for the program to func- tion as intended. However, full information may not be sufficient for the scheme to improve. First, being aware of one’s rights is not the same as being empowered to demand those rights. The BREGS target groups tend to be illiterate or barely educated, to come from the castes most discriminated against, and to lack political clout. It may take more than awareness for them to be able to make demands from those to whom they are subordinates in every way. There is also the preliminary issue of whether new contradictory information can even be processed and accepted in the face of evidence to the contrary from one’s leaders, patrons, and other figures of author- ity in one’s community. As we have seen, a household’s political connections and vote history, and local officials’ characteristics, have significant effects, both positive and negative, on knowledge. Second, knowing the rules and how to obtain work may not be REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 195 sufficient in the presence of very real supply-side issues that may play a substantial role in limiting participation (as further discussed in chapter 8). A key question is whether demand- or supply-side constraints are the more important handicap to higher participation and a bet- ter working scheme, and whether improving one without changing the other can still enhance the scheme’s functioning. Knowledge of public program eligibility and take-up procedures is a necessary con- dition for people to demand their rights, but is it sufficient? Would raising awareness on its own embolden people to demand employ- ment and put sufficient pressure on local governments and officials to overcome supply-side limitations? To shed light on these key questions, we piloted a demand-side intervention aimed at increasing individual knowledge. Alternative modes of information campaign were initially explored through sev- eral open-ended focus group discussions with BREGS participants and nonparticipants, and men and women separately, in Nalanda and Patna districts. In Nalanda, information about the scheme was read out by facilitators; in Patna, the team showed short video clips on the scheme produced by the Ministry of Rural Development and provided additional information through facilitation and discus- sion. The film format attracted considerable interest in the focus groups. Feedback gathered in the field after the discussions sug- gested that a facilitator was needed for viewers to retain the infor- mation provided through such video clips and to provide the most recent information. The demand-side pilot was thus designed as a film on the program to be shown to households, in the presence of a facilitator. Based on these preliminary findings from the fieldwork, and with the cooperation of the Rural Development Department of the government of Bihar, we produced a film to convey explicit infor- mation about rights and entitlements under BREGS. The film was tailored to Bihar’s specific context and program guidelines. Bihari actors acted out an entertaining and emotionally engaging story- based plot whose purpose was to provide repeated information on how the scheme works, who can participate, and how to go about participating. The film was produced by a local nongovernmental organization, Praxis (Institute for Participatory Practices). The film was disseminated between mid-February and mid- March 2010 in a randomly selected subsample of 40 out of the 150 villages that were surveyed in R1. Compliance at the village level was complete. Because the 150 villages were drawn randomly from all villages in rural Bihar, we can infer mean impacts of a village receiving a screening of the film for rural Bihar. However, it is 196 RIGHT TO WORK? important to recognize that this evaluation design (in common with other randomized control trials) only identifies mean impact. We cannot conclude that exposure to the film would have that impact in all villages. In practice, there will be heterogeneity in the impacts. We return to this issue. As a check on the randomization (if something went wrong that we do not know about), we tested for differences in the sample means of the 75 village variables used in the analysis (including village means of household variables). The difference in sample means was only statistically significant at the 5 percent level for three of the 75 variables. (Some significant differences are to be expected by chance even when fully randomized.) The treatment and control samples are clearly well balanced. In each village, the film was shown in two separate locations at different times. At each location, the film was screened twice, fol- lowed by a question and answer session and distribution of hand- outs. Concerted efforts were made to announce and advertize the upcoming screenings widely in advance. Local officials such as the Mukhiya and Sarpanch, opposition leaders, and local BREGS offi- cials were specifically invited to attend. The film was typically shown in a common area, such as an open ground, school building, or community hall. In 93 percent of the showings, the facilitators noted that the majority of people watched both screenings of the film. On average, about 365 people (38 percent women) attended at least one of the two back-to-back screenings at a given location. In a third of the villages, the Mukhiya attended the show as did the mate; the PRS attended in half the treatment villages, and the local opposi- tion leader did so in close to 60 percent. People in the majority of shows (89 percent) reported that the information was somewhat new, and the movie generated a lot of discussion in 29 percent of the showings. Impacts of the Information Intervention The intervention aimed to raise awareness and through that to also favorably affect the scheme’s outcomes. We begin with the single- difference estimates of the impact of showing the movie in a house- hold’s village on knowledge and other outcomes. Table 7.5 gives the movie’s estimated impacts on knowledge about BREGS, for men and women separately, as well as for the full sample. These are regres- sion coefficients of knowledge scores on the village assignment of the movie.9 The dependent variable is a dummy variable taking the value 1 if a respondent was aware of BREGS or got the right answer to the relevant question, and 0 otherwise. Thus, the regression coefficient Table 7.5 Estimates of the Effect of the Movie on Knowledge about the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme by Gender Whole sample Women Men Film in Film in Film in village Constant Observations village Constant Observations village Constant Observations Heard 0.028** 0.915*** 5,012 0.047*** 0.867*** 2,782 0.006 0.976*** 2,230 Score 1 0.497*** 2.465*** 4,655 0.368*** 2.006*** 2,464 0.696*** 2.977*** 2,191 Days 0.118*** 0.221*** 4,597 0.117*** 0.104*** 2,429 0.130*** 0.351*** 2,168 Gender −0.022 0.654*** 4,635 −0.007 0.622*** 2,452 −0.037 0.690*** 2,183 BPL 0.042* 0.615*** 4,636 0.048 0.559*** 2,453 0.039 0.676*** 2,183 Work lag 0.062*** 0.088*** 4,629 0.038* 0.064*** 2,450 0.094*** 0.114*** 2,179 Unemployment allowance 0.094*** 0.286*** 4,635 0.081** 0.201*** 2,451 0.117*** 0.381*** 2,184 Wage rate 0.116*** 0.322*** 4,637 0.082*** 0.239*** 2,452 0.165*** 0.413*** 2,185 Wage lag 0.048*** 0.106*** 4,609 0.025 0.093*** 2,438 0.078*** 0.122*** 2,171 Contractor 0.047** 0.184*** 4,634 −0.011 0.132*** 2,449 0.121*** 0.242*** 2,185 Score 2 0.020 1.317*** 4,655 −0.068 1.140*** 2,464 0.144 1.514*** 2,191 Child care 0.075*** 0.128*** 4,644 0.073*** 0.100*** 2,458 0.081*** 0.160*** 2,186 Water −0.041* 0.604*** 4,645 −0.063* 0.546*** 2,458 −0.009 0.668*** 2,187 Shade −0.026 0.445*** 4,644 −0.067** 0.394*** 2,457 0.027 0.502*** 2,187 First aid 0.016 0.142*** 4,642 −0.008 0.102*** 2,457 0.049 0.186*** 2,185 Board 0.023** 0.028*** 4,996 −0.004 0.014*** 2,773 0.058*** 0.045*** 2,223 Demand 0.049** 0.605*** 4,989 0.027 0.515*** 2,767 0.083*** 0.717*** 2,222 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Regressions using household d weights and individual l outcomes. Based on round 2 data only. If an individual had not heard about BREGS, answers to other questions were coded as missing. Full definitions of the knowledge questions are given in table 7.3. BPL = Below Poverty Line. 197 *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. 198 RIGHT TO WORK? is the difference in the mean knowledge score between those who lived in a village that was assigned the movie and those who lived in a village that was not. The constant gives the knowledge estimate for the control group. Given that the village assignment was random by design, and there was complete compliance (meaning the movie was shown as planned in all selected treatment villages), the estimated difference in means is unbiased. The movie had a significant effect on knowledge of the existence of BREGS for the sample as a whole, although the effect was small (a 3 percentage point gain) and only significant at the 5 percent level. However, it should be recalled that knowledge of the existence of BREGS was high to begin with. Also note that a larger and more significant effect on knowledge is found among women, who (as noted above) were less aware initially. There was a significant impact on knowledge about how many days of work are available, with a 12 percentage point increase in the proportion who got this right being attributed to the movie (significant at the 1 percent level). The impact was slightly higher for men than for women. For men, but much less or not at all for women, the movie had a large effect on knowledge of the fact that work has to be provided within 15 days, that wages are to be paid within two weeks, and that contractors are not permitted under the legislation; these impacts are all significant at the 1 percent level for men. Awareness of the provision for an unemployment allowance if work could not be provided also rose substantially as a result of the movie, with a larger effect for men (12 percentage points) than for women (8 percentage points). Similar effects were evident for knowledge of the wage rate, with a large and significant effect of the movie, though again, stronger for men than for women. The fact that child care is to be provided was little known in the control group, but rose appreciably for those living in villages where the movie was shown, rising from 13 percent to 20 percent. The impact was similar for men and women. Among women, but not men, there was a puzzling negative effect on knowledge that the scheme requires that drinking water and shade be provided at worksites. There was a sizable and significant effect of the movie, among men, but not women, on knowing that work has to be demanded. Some 72 percent of men knew this in the control villages, rising to 80 percent with the movie. It is striking that there was no impact on women’s awareness that work had to be demanded, given that barely half of them knew this in the control villages. It may be that because women typically go to BREGS worksites with male family REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 199 members or as part of groups, this is information they do not feel they need to retain. Following the same estimation method as used for table 7.5, table 7.6 presents estimates of the movie’s impacts on a number of other outcome indicators. Rows 1 through 22 report on differences in perceptions about a number of factors, while the last four rows give impacts on actual aspects of how the scheme functioned after the movie: demand, participation, days of work, and wages. The perceptions that BREGS projects have increased employment and led to a decline in migration rose appreciably and significantly as a result of the movie for both genders. For example, the feeling that one can get work if one asks doubled from the 9 percent for the control group. Similarly, the perceptions that one can get work on BREGS when one demands it, and of improvements in BREGS work opportunities for the household, were appreciably and significantly raised by the movie. The first increased from 43 percent for men in the control villages to close to 60 percent for those living in villages where the movie was shown, and from 35 percent to 51 percent for women. There was a doubling in the perception among both men and women that BREGS work opportunities have increased between the two rounds of the survey. In general, perceptions of improvements in village infrastructure, greater work opportunities, and lower migration in the village (not linking this to BREGS like the previous questions) were significantly raised by the movie, although not always for both genders. When asked whether migration has decreased in their villages, 13 percent more men and 9 percent more women agreed in the villages where the movie was shown than in the control villages. Similarly, per- ceptions that village infrastructure has improved were significantly higher among women, though not for men, in the villages where the movie was shown. There is a small effect on men’s perceptions that women can choose BREGS projects, but no such effect for women. However, the movie has a strong significant negative effect on the perception of men and women that the assets created have been useful to women, and for men only that women participate in BREGS work. No other perceptions concerning women were affected by the movie. There are no significant effects on actual or desired participa- tion, wage rates, or days worked (table 7.6). Although we find sig- nificant impacts of the movie on both knowledge and perceptions of work opportunities (and infrastructure), we find no impacts on actual work or wages. It may be that perceptions are informed by factors that are not yet evident in the objective data, although the time period and timing of the intervention should have sufficed to Table 7.6 Estimates of the Effect of the Movie on Perceptions and Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme 200 Participation by Gender Whole round 2 sample Women Men Film in Film in Film in Dependent variable village Constant Observations village Constant Observations village Constant Observations 1 Can influence wages 0.033 0.637*** 4,408 0.016 0.617*** 2,259 0.053 0.659*** 2,149 2 Benefits of participating in Gram Sabha 0.104*** 0.152*** 4,356 0.096*** 0.112*** 2,267 0.115*** 0.197*** 2,089 3 Women participate in Gram Sabha 0.088*** 0.367*** 4,507 0.087*** 0.340*** 2,395 0.090** 0.398*** 2,112 4 Get work under BREGS when demanded 0.085*** 0.084*** 4,201 0.072*** 0.069*** 2,125 0.100*** 0.099*** 2,076 5 BREGS projects have increased employment 0.084*** 0.176*** 4,173 0.067** 0.147*** 2,096 0.105*** 0.206*** 2,077 6 BREGS decreased migration of labor 0.093*** 0.140*** 4,071 0.087*** 0.108*** 2,028 0.102*** 0.172*** 2,043 7 BREGS work will be available next year −0.032 0.563*** 1,906 −0.041 0.520*** 831 −0.030 0.599*** 1,075 8 Women have the right to choose BREGS projects 0.047* 0.632*** 3,188 0.030 0.614*** 1,515 0.064* 0.649*** 1,673 9 Assets useful to women created under BREGS −0.088*** 0.832*** 4,013 −0.090*** 0.844*** 2,039 −0.088*** 0.821*** 1,974 10 Women work in BREGS projects −0.072*** 0.721*** 4,211 −0.045 0.717*** 2,162 −0.104*** 0.726*** 2,049 11 Women treated well at BREGS worksite 0.003 0.981*** 2,602 −0.004 0.983*** 1,274 0.010 0.978*** 1,328 12 Women get work if they bring children to worksite 0.008 0.779*** 2,322 0.010 0.762*** 1,104 0.009 0.795*** 1,218 13 Distance women would be willing to go to work on BREGS worksite 9.180 61.741*** 3,063 36.132 61.053*** 1,584 −24.708 62.457*** 1,479 14 Women paid equal wages as men 0.021 0.807*** 2,454 0.004 0.824*** 1,198 0.038 0.790*** 1,256 15 Women of household would like to work on BREGS −0.013 0.454*** 4,929 −0.011 0.467*** 2,740 −0.015 0.437*** 2,189 16 Women of household would be allowed to work on BREGS −0.017 0.458*** 4,913 −0.019 0.473*** 2,724 −0.014 0.440*** 2,189 (Continued on the following page) 201 202 Table 7.6 (Continued) Whole round 2 sample Women Men Film in Film in Film in Dependent variable village Constant Observations village Constant Observations village Constant Observations 17 Knowledge of BREGS increased in past year in your family 0.163*** 0.427*** 4,834 0.163*** 0.348*** 2,637 0.166*** 0.522*** 2,197 18 BREGS work opportunities improved in past year for your family 0.105*** 0.119*** 4,798 0.110*** 0.110*** 2,606 0.098*** 0.129*** 2,192 19 Infrastructure improved in village 0.068*** 0.611*** 4,888 0.087*** 0.602*** 2,671 0.044 0.621*** 2,217 20 Work increased in village 0.063** 0.424*** 4,560 0.048 0.407*** 2,410 0.081** 0.444*** 2,150 21 Wage increased in village 0.018 0.755*** 4,627 0.017 0.740*** 2,472 0.018 0.771*** 2,155 22 Migration decreased in village 0.112*** 0.184*** 4,506 0.094*** 0.148*** 2,355 0.134*** 0.225*** 2,151 Scheme outcomes after the movie 23 BREGS participation −0.010 0.054*** 5,012 −0.009 0.035*** 2,782 −0.009 0.078*** 2,230 24 BREGS days −1.232 4.690*** 1,047 −0.586 2.842*** 430 −1.704 6.011*** 617 25 BREGS wages −72.841 406.176*** 1,047 −52.766 261.668*** 430 −88.228 509.487*** 617 26 Desired participation in round 2 −0.012 0.532*** 5,012 −0.021 0.446*** 2,782 0.002 0.641*** 2,230 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. l outcomes. Based on round 2 data. If individual had not heard about BREGS, answers to other questions were coded Note: Regressions using weights and individual as missing. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. 203 204 RIGHT TO WORK? capture any real effects. It appears more likely that the perceptions were distorted by the movie. Having watched the movie, people came to think that the scheme was working better for the village as a whole than their own objective experiences would suggest. The results in tables 7.5 and 7.6 use R2 data. We can also exploit the panel data structure to test further for impacts of the movie on the various transitions discussed earlier. First, consider the group of “excess demanders” in R1. Did the movie encourage those exposed to it to take up work on the scheme in R2? The answer is a clear “no.” The regression coefficient of the probability of taking up work among the R1 excess demanders on the dummy variable for whether the movie was shown is 0.001 for men and −0.006 for women, and neither are significantly different from zero at the 10 percent level. Nor was there any impact on those who were neither actual participants nor excess demanders in R1. Among this group, the regression coefficient of the probability of either taking up work or becoming an excess demander on the dummy variable for whether the movie was shown was not significantly different from zero at the 10 percent level. We also calculated difference-in-difference (DD) impact estimates of the movie on knowledge for all individuals, as well as for men and women separately. As we expect given the randomization, the movie’s estimated DD impacts are quite similar to those found for the single difference and reported above. However, small-sample properties mean that there may be some dissimilarities between the randomized in and out villages. Thus, the DD estimator provides extra cleaning for time-invariant selection bias that may be present as the result of any small-sample bias. The DD impacts tended to be larger but less statistically significant. For example, the movie’s effect on women having heard of BREGS is nearly double that esti- mated with the single difference. The major disparity with the previ- ous estimates concerns awareness of the mandated facilities. Using R2 data only, we find significant impacts on knowing about the child care provision as well as negative effects on being aware of the water and shade provisions. There is no sign of movie impacts on any of these variables when we use both survey rounds. We also test whether the movie had any effect on the number or the change in the number of worksites that opened in the GP. There is no effect on either. Table 7.7 turns to impacts of the movie on transitions from not knowing to knowing about BREGS. There may only be a small over- all impact on the proportion of people who get the answer right, as we saw above using R2 data. Yet the small increase in awareness could coincide with a learning process together with a forgetting Table 7.7 Effects of the Movie on Learning about the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Heard Days Gender BPL Work lag Unemployment Wage rate Wage lag Contractor Panel A: “STILL RIGHT” Whole sample Film in village 0.028*** 0.256*** −0.061 0.032 −0.038 0.132** 0.207*** 0.109 0.127 Constant 0.946*** 0.384*** 0.676*** 0.662*** 0.313*** 0.468*** 0.407*** 0.130*** 0.274*** Observations 3,100 717 1,583 1,346 149 605 937 252 459 Men Film in village −0.002 0.246*** −0.075 0.071 −0.056 0.205*** 0.207*** 0.020 0.181* Constant 0.990*** 0.449*** 0.689*** 0.681*** 0.389*** 0.510*** 0.460*** 0.198*** 0.361*** Observations 1,511 548 838 819 106 449 620 157 307 Women Film in village 0.052*** 0.285** −0.046 −0.019 −0.013 −0.072 0.196** 0.192 0.011 Constant 0.907*** 0.162*** 0.663*** 0.636*** 0.102* 0.369*** 0.309*** 0.078** 0.108*** Observations 1,589 169 745 527 43 156 317 95 152 Panel B: “LEARNING” Whole sample Film in village 0.022 0.115*** −0.009 0.069* 0.068*** 0.106*** 0.129*** 0.082*** 0.058* Constant 0.789*** 0.161*** 0.644*** 0.594*** 0.084*** 0.263*** 0.302*** 0.087*** 0.167*** Observations 649 2,167 1,346 1,577 2,770 2,318 1,975 2,650 2,459 Men Film in village −0.155 0.110** 0.030 −0.001 0.090*** 0.100* 0.109** 0.098*** 0.149*** Constant 0.941*** 0.264*** 0.662*** 0.692*** 0.105*** 0.349*** 0.398*** 0.107*** 0.198*** Observations 75 915 647 664 1,373 1,035 856 1,315 1,172 (Continued on the following page) 205 206 Table 7.7 (Continued) Heard Days Gender BPL Work lag Unemployment Wage rate Wage lag Contractor Women Film in village 0.049 0.120*** −0.044 0.117** 0.047 0.113** 0.140*** 0.066** −0.025 Constant 0.764*** 0.091*** 0.628*** 0.525*** 0.064*** 0.195*** 0.236*** 0.068*** 0.141*** Observations 574 1,252 699 913 1,397 1,283 1,119 1,335 1,287 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: “Still right” is defined as being aware in round 1 and staying aware in round 2. “Learning” is defined as not being aware in round 1 but answer- ing correctly in round 2. If an individual had not heard about BREGS, answers to other questions were coded as missing. Definitions of each knowledge question are given in table 7.3. BPL = Below Poverty Line. *, **, and *** indicate significance at the 10 percent, 5 percent, and 1 percent levels, respectively, based on robust standard errors. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 207 process that may reduce the net impact. So it is of interest to isolate the learning process. To do so, we need to bring in the baseline and panel. Panel A of table 7.7 shows impacts for the subset of people who answered questions about BREGS correctly in R1 to see whether the movie reduced the incidence of forgetting, and hence influenced the share that are “still right.” Panel B then shows impact estimates for the subset of those who answered incorrectly in R1 and are “learning” about the scheme.10 Did the movie help them learn? The movie had significant, mostly positive, effects on retaining information about some of the scheme’s stipulated rules between the two survey rounds. For example, it significantly helped both men and women remember that BREGS offers 100 days of employ- ment per household and at what wage rate. It enabled men to recall that an unemployment allowance is mandated when work is not provided and that contractors are not allowed. It reinforced aware- ness of the existence of the scheme for women who had heard about BREGS in R1. Women who knew in R1 that child care facilities should be provided were significantly reminded of this by the movie. However, being from a village that showed the movie appears to have had a negative effect on men’s and women’s recollection that worksites must provide drinking water.11 Panel B of table 7.7 turns to the movie’s impacts on learning about aspects of the scheme that people had been ignorant of in R1. The movie significantly helped increase knowledge about a major- ity of the 12 knowledge questions for both men and women. For example, 12 percent more individuals who are from movie villages than those from control villages learned about the allowed number of work days, 12 percent more women that participation does not require a BPL card, 13 percent more people about the wage rate, 8 percent more people about the prescribed time for wage payments, and 15 percent more men that contractors are not permitted. For mandated facilities, the movie only influenced learning about child care. The movie could have heterogeneous effects according to people’s characteristics—including both those attributes that help one retain and digest information and those attributes that make that infor- mation more relevant to some individuals and less so to others. In particular, we postulate that education, self-mastery (as captured by the Pearlin scores), caste identity, and being politically connected matter to how much the movie affects knowledge. Table 7.8 gives the results. We found some signs of heterogeneous impacts. For instance, compared with those with primary educa- tion, illiterate individuals were more likely to feel that their knowl- edge of BREGS improved and that infrastructure has gotten better. Table 7.8 Tests for Heterogeneity in the Impacts of the Movie 208 Education: primary school vs. Standard Pearlin Standard Pearlin Standard Caste Standard Political Standard Male - Standard illiterate error 2-1 error 3–1 error 2-1 error 2-1 error female error Heard −0.037 0.023 0.028 0.033 0.013 0.039 0.019 0.022 −0.052 0.062 −0.040** 0.021 Score 1 (employment) 0.171 0.248 0.406* 0.232 0.367 0.304 0.298 0.296 −0.589 0.768 0.329* 0.182 Score 2 (facilities) 0.225 0.185 0.082 0.178 0.130 0.237 0.038 0.180 −0.819* 0.480 0.212 0.135 Can influence wages −0.048 0.058 −0.030 0.063 0.013 0.086 −0.095 0.066 −0.172 0.153 0.038 0.047 Benefits of participating in Gram Sabha −0.004 0.060 0.033 0.066 0.112 0.082 0.020 0.067 −0.305** 0.126 0.019 0.044 Women participate in Gram Sabha −0.080 0.064 0.104 0.066 0.154* 0.086 −0.104 0.070 −0.089 0.137 0.003 0.049 Get work under BREGS when demanded −0.048 0.042 0.019 0.039 0.101* 0.060 −0.109** 0.046 0.043 0.071 0.028 0.033 BREGS projects have increased employment −0.018 0.059 0.048 0.058 0.180** 0.077 −0.101 0.062 0.021 0.097 0.038 0.044 BREGS decreased migration of labor 0.036 0.061 0.024 0.052 −0.032 0.065 −0.093* 0.054 −0.009 0.088 0.015 0.043 BREGS work will be available next year −0.003 0.096 0.152 0.131 0.096 0.15 0.174* 0.105 0.018 0.212 0.012 0.079 Women have the right to choose BREGS projects −0.009 0.061 0.149* 0.077 0.105 0.101 0.014 0.073 −0.120 0.180 0.033 0.055 Assets useful to women created under BREGS 0.026 0.057 0.054 0.057 0.131** 0.063 0.024 0.054 −0.171 0.150 0.002 0.042 Women work in BREGS projects 0.138** 0.059 −0.003 0.058 0.008 0.082 0.132** 0.060 −0.149 0.116 −0.059 0.046 Women treated well at BREGS worksite 0.014 0.016 0.021 0.030 0.035 0.031 −0.012 0.011 0.030 0.077 0.013 0.015 (Continued on the following page) 209 Table 7.8 (Continued) 210 Education: primary school vs. Standard Pearlin Standard Pearlin Standard Caste Standard Political Standard Male - Standard illiterate error 2-1 error 3–1 error 2-1 error 2-1 error female error Women get work if they bring children to worksite 0.049 0.069 −0.031 0.076 −0.034 0.110 −0.185*** 0.055 −0.374*** 0.101 −0.001 0.056 Distance women would be willing to go to work on BREGS worksite 0.102 0.068 0.014 0.070 0.067 0.087 0.186** 0.075 −0.318*** 0.117 0.033 0.050 Women paid equal wages as men −0.006 0.051 0.041 0.063 −0.014 0.084 0.072 0.057 −0.061 0.140 −0.004 0.048 Women of household would like to work on BREGS 0.001 0.051 0.059 0.063 0.026 0.085 0.019 0.056 −0.064 0.141 0.006 0.048 Women of household would be allowed to work on BREGS −0.109* 0.060 0.069 0.065 0.051 0.085 −0.072 0.066 −0.220* 0.127 0.003 0.046 Knowledge of BREGS increased in past year in your family 0.042 0.053 −0.003 0.045 0.022 0.065 −0.145*** 0.052 −0.327*** 0.121 −0.011 0.038 BREGS work opportunities improved in past year for your family −0.140** 0.060 −0.154*** 0.059 −0.170** 0.083 −0.211*** 0.063 −0.026 0.139 −0.043 0.046 Infrastructure improved in village −0.086 0.065 0.129* 0.067 0.163* 0.088 −0.121* 0.068 0.028 0.122 0.033 0.049 Work increased in village −0.080 0.051 −0.013 0.048 0.054 0.075 −0.132** 0.055 0.024 0.127 0.000 0.041 Wage increased in village −0.051 0.061 0.088* 0.051 0.057 0.070 −0.183*** 0.058 0.003 0.112 0.040 0.044 (Continued on the following page) 211 212 Table 7.8 (Continued) Education: primary school vs. Standard Pearlin Standard Pearlin Standard Caste Standard Political Standard Male - Standard illiterate error 2-1 error 3–1 error 2-1 error 2-1 error female error Scheme outcomes after the movie BREGS participation −0.021 0.019 −0.01 0.034 0.023 0.037 −0.025 0.041 0 0.052 0 0.021 BREGS days −5.098** 2.138 −0.23 2.098 1.293 2.297 −0.546 1.873 −1.529 1.371 −1.118 1.535 BREGS wages −487.300** 204.172 35.65 207.564 169.881 220.525 −37.958 183.366 −113.54 135.939 −35.462 147.347 BREGS wages received −106.035 148.744 107.668 192.594 237.912 210.289 168.739 157.837 −106.74 130.428 43.038 133.216 Desired participation in round 2 −0.016 0.061 0.027 0.063 −0.085 0.084 0.026 0.059 0.016 0.139 0.023 0.047 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Estimated using a single difference on round 2 data. Estimates give the difference in estimates between the specified groups. The stratifications are as follows: education: 1= illiterate, 2 = literate and up to class 5 pass, 3 = more than primary; caste: 1 = Mahadalit, 2 = all others; Pearlin: 1 = scale < 3; 2 = scale = 3, 4, or 5; 3 = scale > 5; political: 1 = person voted, close to Mukhiya, or close to ward member, 2 = none of these are true. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 213 The movie resulted in 5.1 more days of employment for them than for the more educated as well as 487 rupees (Rs) more in wages (implying a daily wage rate of Rs 95, which is almost exactly the average BREGS wage in R2). Although this could be considered a nonnegligible gain, it is confined to current BREGS participants; the movie had no impact on participation by illiterate individuals. A relatively higher Pearlin scale results in higher impacts on a number of perceptions. For example, going from Pearlin 1 to 2 increases the employment knowledge score by 41 percent. Impacts on quite a few perceptions also vary by caste. Typically, impacts of the movie are significantly higher for Mahadalits, although in some cases, they are lower for them than for higher-level castes. There are also notable differences between those who do and do not have political connec- tions. The movie’s impacts were significantly different with respect to the facilities knowledge score and a number of perceptions. In all cases, the impacts are larger for the unconnected. In summary, we find that the movie helped both men and women remember and retain information about the scheme’s rules and raised knowledge among those unaware of the rules in R1. It also had appreciable and significant impacts on the perceptions of both men and women on the functioning of the scheme. This is particularly the case among individuals who are likely to find this information relevant, such as illiterate individuals and Mahadalits (typically the most disadvantaged groups). In addition, impacts are larger for more empowered and politically connected individuals. However, there are no significant effects on actual employment or wages except among illiterate participating individuals, for whom the movie appears to have helped secure extra work on existing BREGS projects. Annex 7A 214 Table 7A.1 Knowledge among Participants, Excess Demanders, and the Rest Participants Excess demanders Rest Round 1 Whole Male Female Whole Male Female Whole Male Female Variable Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Heard 1.00 0.00 1.00 0.00 1.00 0.00 0.98 0.13 0.99 0.09 0.97 0.16 0.67 0.47 0.87 0.34 0.58 0.49 Score 1 2.98 1.61 3.22 1.56 2.15 1.50 1.99 1.86 2.35 1.97 1.54 1.60 1.81 1.70 2.47 1.86 1.38 1.43 Days 0.42 0.49 0.48 0.50 0.20 0.40 0.22 0.41 0.30 0.46 0.12 0.32 0.20 0.40 0.37 0.48 0.09 0.28 Gender 0.63 0.48 0.64 0.48 0.59 0.49 0.52 0.50 0.55 0.50 0.49 0.50 0.53 0.50 0.54 0.50 0.52 0.50 BPL 0.64 0.48 0.67 0.47 0.54 0.50 0.44 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.37 0.48 0.40 0.49 0.46 0.50 0.35 0.48 Work lag 0.05 0.23 0.06 0.24 0.04 0.19 0.04 0.19 0.06 0.24 0.01 0.12 0.04 0.20 0.08 0.27 0.02 0.13 Unemployment allowance 0.24 0.43 0.28 0.45 0.11 0.31 0.20 0.40 0.26 0.44 0.13 0.34 0.20 0.40 0.35 0.48 0.10 0.30 Wage rate 0.60 0.49 0.65 0.48 0.45 0.50 0.32 0.47 0.38 0.48 0.24 0.43 0.23 0.42 0.36 0.48 0.14 0.35 Wage lag 0.16 0.37 0.18 0.39 0.11 0.31 0.09 0.29 0.10 0.30 0.09 0.28 0.08 0.27 0.08 0.28 0.08 0.26 Contractor 0.24 0.43 0.28 0.45 0.12 0.33 0.16 0.37 0.21 0.41 0.10 0.30 0.17 0.38 0.25 0.43 0.13 0.33 Score 2 1.80 1.38 1.88 1.36 1.52 1.42 1.12 1.34 1.26 1.38 0.96 1.28 1.02 1.32 1.18 1.40 0.91 1.25 Child care 0.22 0.42 0.22 0.41 0.24 0.43 0.19 0.39 0.18 0.38 0.19 0.40 0.18 0.38 0.19 0.40 0.17 0.38 Water 0.76 0.43 0.79 0.41 0.67 0.47 0.47 0.50 0.54 0.50 0.40 0.49 0.44 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.40 0.49 Shade 0.48 0.50 0.52 0.50 0.35 0.48 0.26 0.44 0.32 0.47 0.19 0.39 0.23 0.42 0.29 0.45 0.20 0.40 First aid 0.35 0.48 0.37 0.48 0.27 0.45 0.20 0.40 0.23 0.42 0.17 0.38 0.18 0.39 0.21 0.41 0.16 0.37 Board — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — Demand — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — Participants Excess demanders Rest Round 2 Whole Male Female Whole Male Female Whole Male Female Variable Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD Heard 1.00 0.00 1.00 0.00 1.00 0.00 0.99 0.08 1.00 0.05 0.99 0.10 0.84 0.37 0.94 0.24 0.79 0.41 Score 1 3.60 1.56 3.75 1.58 3.30 1.48 2.65 1.77 3.11 1.84 2.18 1.57 2.24 1.70 2.89 1.86 1.85 1.46 Days 0.38 0.48 0.43 0.50 0.26 0.44 0.26 0.44 0.38 0.49 0.15 0.35 0.20 0.40 0.36 0.48 0.11 0.31 Gender 0.68 0.47 0.72 0.45 0.60 0.49 0.67 0.47 0.69 0.46 0.65 0.48 0.61 0.49 0.65 0.48 0.60 0.49 BPL 0.79 0.41 0.77 0.42 0.82 0.39 0.63 0.48 0.69 0.46 0.58 0.49 0.57 0.50 0.63 0.48 0.53 0.50 Work lag 0.18 0.39 0.20 0.40 0.15 0.36 0.12 0.33 0.14 0.35 0.11 0.31 0.06 0.24 0.10 0.30 0.04 0.19 Unemployment allowance 0.46 0.50 0.48 0.50 0.40 0.49 0.34 0.47 0.42 0.49 0.26 0.44 0.24 0.43 0.36 0.48 0.16 0.37 Wage rate 0.67 0.47 0.68 0.47 0.67 0.47 0.32 0.47 0.41 0.49 0.23 0.42 0.29 0.46 0.41 0.49 0.23 0.42 Wage lag 0.18 0.39 0.18 0.38 0.19 0.39 0.12 0.32 0.13 0.34 0.10 0.30 0.10 0.30 0.13 0.34 0.08 0.28 Contractor 0.27 0.44 0.30 0.46 0.22 0.42 0.19 0.39 0.26 0.44 0.12 0.33 0.18 0.39 0.28 0.45 0.12 0.33 Score 2 1.91 1.25 1.96 1.29 1.80 1.15 1.38 1.26 1.54 1.27 1.21 1.23 1.10 1.21 1.36 1.28 0.94 1.13 Child care 0.28 0.45 0.27 0.45 0.28 0.45 0.14 0.35 0.16 0.37 0.12 0.33 0.12 0.32 0.16 0.37 0.09 0.29 Water 0.80 0.40 0.79 0.40 0.80 0.40 0.62 0.49 0.67 0.47 0.56 0.50 0.51 0.50 0.59 0.49 0.46 0.50 Shade 0.59 0.49 0.58 0.49 0.59 0.49 0.46 0.50 0.51 0.50 0.41 0.49 0.37 0.48 0.46 0.50 0.31 0.46 First aid 0.25 0.43 0.31 0.46 0.13 0.33 0.16 0.36 0.19 0.40 0.12 0.32 0.11 0.31 0.15 0.35 0.08 0.27 Board 0.09 0.28 0.11 0.32 0.04 0.19 0.02 0.14 0.03 0.18 0.00 0.07 0.03 0.18 0.06 0.25 0.02 0.13 Demand 0.82 0.38 0.83 0.37 0.80 0.40 0.74 0.44 0.79 0.41 0.68 0.47 0.46 0.50 0.62 0.49 0.38 0.49 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee (BREGS) survey. Note: See text for definition of variables. BPL = Below Poverty Line; SD = standard deviation; — = not available. 215 216 RIGHT TO WORK? Notes 1. Note that the estimates of job card ownership from the 2009/10 National Sample Survey (NSS) reported in chapter 1 are even lower (17 percent of rural households). As noted previously, a specialized survey (the BREGS has an entire module with questions on the job card) is more likely to capture scheme-specific information than a general household survey. 2. Field studies suggest that this is true in most states across India (see, for example, Drèze and Khera 2011). These studies also typically find that the unemployment allowance is rarely paid in lieu of providing work. In most cases, the allowance is paid following a social audit process in which the information is made public and pressure is brought to bear on local officials. 3. Some 4 percent of households in both rounds cited the lack of a BPL card as the reason for not obtaining a job card despite applying for it. 4. For example, Andhra Pradesh revised the scheme’s Schedule of Rates to enable disabled workers to earn the scheme wage following a detailed analysis of effort required. In 2008, Madhya Pradesh enabled the elderly and persons with disabilities to undertake lighter work, such as plantation and provision of worksite facilities work (National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations 2009). 5. Unsurprisingly, participants tend to be more aware of the program (see table 7A.1). 6. The original scale consists of a seven-item scale developed by Pearlin and others (1981). Each item is a statement regarding the respondent’s per- ception of self, and respondents are asked how strongly they agree or dis- agree with each statement with four potential response categories. The original scale ranges from 4 to 16. We transformed the questions into yes/ no answers, which proved to be a better approach in this setting based on our field tests. Our scale is then created by adding up the answers, thus ranges from 0 to 7. 7. We tested for selection bias with the standard Heckman method using a probit for each individual awareness question. We found the Mills Ratio to be insignificant in every case. 8. We run this as a linear probability model so that we can compare the coefficient on gender across the two regressions (which cannot be done across probit estimates). 9. The “svy” command in STATA, which takes into account survey design for estimation purposes, was used to ensure that the regression coef- ficient on the assignment dummy variable was equivalent to the difference in weighted means. This also takes clustering into account. 10. These are selected subsamples, so caution should be taken in draw- ing inferences for the population. Nonetheless, these tests are of obvious interest with regard to those subsamples. REFORMING BREGS: CITIZEN AWARENESS 217 11. Note that it does not make sense to examine impacts on the compos- ite indices (Score 1 and Score 2) for this subsample or the next, so they are left out of the table. References Development Alternatives. 2009. “Report on Scoping Study for Design and Development of Alternative Implementation Model(s) on NREGS.” Background note prepared for the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme study. Development Alternatives, Inc., Washington, DC. Drèze, Jean, and Reetika Khera. 2011. “The Battle for Employment Guar- antee.” In The Battle for Employment Guarantee, edited by Reetika Khera. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. 43–80. Indian Grameen Services. 2010. “Exploring Shelf of Works for Flood Affected Area of North Bihar.” Report prepared for the Rural Develop- ment Department, government of Bihar and the World Bank. Indian Grameen Services, Kolkata, India. Khera, Reetika, and Nandini Nayak. 2009. “Women Workers and Per- ceptions of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act in India.” Paper presented at the FAO-IFAD-ILO “Workshop on Gaps, Trends and Current Research in Gender Dimensions of Agricultural and Rural Employment: Differentiated Pathways out of Poverty,” Rome, March 30–April 3. National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations. 2009. “NREGA Reforms: Building Rural India—First Annual Report of the National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations on NREGA, 2008–09.” National Consortium on NREGA, Madhya Pradesh, India. National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO). 2009/10. “Socio-Economic Survey Sixty-Sixth Round Schedule 10: Employment and Unemploy- ment.” Government of India, New Delhi. Pearlin, Leonard, Elizabeth Menaghan, Morton Lieberman, and Joseph Mullan. 1981. “The Stress Process.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 22 (4): 337–56. Sunai Consultancy Pvt. Ltd. 2009. “Process Qualitative Observation Report, Feb–Mar 2009, Four Blocks of Muzaffarpur and Saharsa Dis- tricts of Bihar.” Background note prepared for the Bihar Rural Employ- ment Guarantee Scheme study. Sunai Consultancy, Bihar, India. 8 Reforming the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme: Administrative Processes The foregoing analysis tells us that the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) is performing far short of its potential. Despite the high demand for work on the scheme, many people who want work do not get it. And many of those who do get work get fewer days than desired and end up with lower wages than stipulated for the scheme. In chapter 7 we also saw that some important demand- side constraints, such as poor awareness and disempowerment on the part of potential beneficiaries, limit the scheme’s performance. This chapter examines the scheme’s delivery mechanisms more closely to identify the points at which practice differs significantly from intent and how performance might be improved. The supply- side constraints identified in this chapter are relevant to both the income gains to poor people from the extra employment on BREGS andd the value to them of the assets created by the scheme. The cre- ation of productive village assets that promote future livelihoods is a secondary objective of BREGS, and it is typically accorded lower priority than employment generation. However, as seen in chapter 6, the cost-effectiveness of BREGS in reducing poverty through the income gains to workers alone is questionable. As shown in that chapter, a simple cash transfer program based on Below-Poverty- Line (BPL) ration cards could do better, even allowing for adminis- trative costs and poor targeting of BPL cards. So the value to poor people of the assets created should be an important concern in efforts to improve the scheme because it may tip the balance for or against this type of scheme.1 219 220 RIGHT TO WORK? We find bottlenecks in the planning and work sanctioning pro- cesses that contribute to delays in opening worksites and frequent interruption of work. The resulting unpredictability of work provi- sion is likely to make labor supply decisions more difficult, with households less likely to consider BREGS as a reliable source of employment in times of need. For instance, only about half— 59 percent of men and 51 percent of women in 2009/10 (round 2 of the BREGS survey, R2)—believed BREGS work would be available in their village in the next year. More important, only 12 percent of men and 9 percent of women felt that BREGS work was available when they needed it in the past year. A Closer Look at the Scheme’s Administration Planning for Work According to the scheme’s guidelines, the elected village council, led by the Mukhiya, is responsible for preparing annual plans for the projects to be undertaken under the scheme. This annual planning process is intended to generate an annual plan—a shelf of works and a labor budget (that is, an estimate of person days that the shelf of works can generate). These plans are meant to be validated through a village meeting (the Gram Sabha) before the necessary administra- tive and technical approvals are requested. In practice, the planning process is rarely community driven or participatory. Confirming qualitative and anecdotal evidence, the survey reveals that project selection is rarely performed by the Gram Sabha. In fact, we find that such village meetings are not widely held.2 We asked BREGS participant workers in the sample about the selection of projects at the most recent worksite at which they worked. Many—36 percent of men and 54 percent of women in 2009/10—did not know how the projects were selected. Among those who did know, the majority (60 percent of men and 71 percent of women) felt the projects were largely chosen by the Mukhiya (figure 8.1). Only a small proportion report selection of projects at the worksite having been made at a Gram Sabha. Qualitative stud- ies in Bihar (and other states) also typically find that Gram Sabhas are rarely held for the purpose of finalizing the shelf of works and that the projects chosen tend to reflect the interests of selected local groups rather than the Gram Panchayat (GP) as a whole.3 The nonparticipatory selection of projects raises the possibility of elite capture in work selection so that the assets created may be of use largely to specific groups and local power lobbies rather than REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 221 Figure 8.1 Selection of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Works 100 90 80 70.5 percentage of participants 70 59.5 60 50 40 30 27.5 21.4 20 9.8 10 7.4 1.9 0.0 1.4 0.7 0 in Gram by Mukhiya by program by other Sabha officer contractor men women Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on responses of workers who report awareness of the project selec- tion process at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked in round 2 of the BREGS survey. More than a third of men and more than half of women workers were unaware of how the specific project was selected. beneficial to the village as a whole.4 In the BREGS survey, we asked people about five assets created under the scheme in their village. We found that knowledge of these assets was poor, particularly among women, with slightly more than half the interviewed women being aware of any of these five assets. Only 13 percent of men and 6 percent of women knew about all five of the assets about which they were asked.5 However, the majority of those who knew about these assets perceived that they were likely to last at least until the next year and were useful, primarily to those who lived close to them.6 In judging the choice of projects, it is necessary to consider local conditions. According to the national scheme guidelines, sev- eral types of projects are permissible under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), ranging from rural connectivity to natural resource regeneration.7 However, as in many states, rural roads are the single most common asset built in Bihar, accounting for nearly half the scheme’s total expenditures in the past three years (see table 8.1 for 2008/09). This emphasis on rural connectivity is also reflected in the survey data. Panchayat rozgar sewaks (PRSs) in 98 percent of the surveyed GPs reported kutcha roads in their shelf of works in both rounds of the survey, while the proportion reporting pucca roads and bridges increased from 29 percent to 64 percent between the two years. However, the variation in the type of project undertaken across Bihar’s four agro-climatic zones suggests that the planning process, 222 Table 8.1 Percentage of Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme Expenditure by Type of Project, 2008/09 Renovation Water Drought Irrigation of traditional Land Flood control Rural Zone conservation proofing works water bodies development and protection connectivity North 12.1 3.5 9.1 7.6 4.7 15.6 47.4 North-East 5.9 2.3 5.1 3.7 2.8 9.4 70.9 South-East 24.1 3.7 15.8 14.2 2.7 4.6 34.9 South-West 23.3 2.6 15.8 15.4 2.3 9.0 31.6 Bihar 14.5 3.0 10.4 9.2 3.4 11.2 48.4 Source: Monthly Progress Reports, Rural Development Department, government of Bihar. Note: The four agro-climatic zones are defined by the Agriculture Department, government of Bihar. The categories of works are from the list of permissible BREGS projects. The expenditure pattern for 2009/10 is similar, with the exception of an increase in drought-proofing works following the severe drought in 2009. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 223 though not participatory, does take into account local conditions to some extent (see table 8.1). As noted in the overview, nearly three- quarters of Bihar is flood prone while 16 percent of its land area is permanently waterlogged.8 BREGS planning in many parts of Bihar, particularly in the two northern agro-climatic zones, includes works related to flood control and protection. The share of expenditures on water conservation and microirrigation works is relatively high in many of the southern districts that are prone to drought. Another consideration has to do with Bihar’s population density, which is among the highest in India. This attribute, combined with a shortage of common (public) land, makes it difficult to identify appropriate sites for building community assets. PRSs interviewed in the BREGS survey reported the lack of common land (on which to build village assets) or wasteland (as a source of soil needed for earth filling) as reasons for their inability to undertake certain types of projects in their GPs. As a result, it becomes necessary to promote appropriate projects on individual lands as permissible under the scheme. Administrative data do not indicate the share of expendi- ture on these projects. However, in the survey, PRSs in 80 percent of the surveyed GPs reported the inclusion of at least some works on the private land of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (SC/STs), Indira Awaas Yojana9 beneficiaries, and of small and medium-size farmers (the last category was included in 2009) in the GP shelf of works. When BREGS was first introduced, the planning process initially developed in a way that was, for the most part, top down and supply driven with a very limited role for communities, the village council, or the Mukhiya. In fact, the shelves of works left over from the previous public works scheme—Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana—were used in many districts. Although this approach is understandable in the early days of the scheme, addressing the performance gaps in the planning stage as the scheme matures (see box 8.1) is criti- cal. Participatory planning by the community can promote con- vergence between schemes at the village level, so as to access all available resources, including those from BREGS, the Backward Regions Grant Fund, and the Village Disaster Management Plan, and develop an integrated village development plan.10 At present, these are at best fragmented planning exercises lacking a coherent vision and leading to duplication of effort. Finally, converging with other government schemes optimizes public resources and helps create durable assets. Local area devel- opment programs, including watershed management, have the potential to develop village natural resources; they are expected to create, repair, and maintain local resources. Cooperation between 224 RIGHT TO WORK? Box 8.1 Informed, Participatory Planning for the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) As part of the qualitative work for this study, we attempted to under- stand what is required to undertake informed, participatory planning in the spirit of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act. Two teams carried out assessments of labor demand and a resource map- ping exercise in two blocks in each of four districts (Gaya, Khaimur, Kishanganj, and Purnea) during February and August 2009. In two Gram Panchayats (GPs), the teams also plotted the relevant data on a geographic information system (GIS) to facilitate planning. These teams developed a list of projects based on resource map- ping, labor demand assessment, and community participation. They found that this “unofficial shelf of works” provided a much larger list of projects than the official shelf of works in the GPs studied. Detailed resource planning (or land surveys as currently undertaken in Andhra Pradesh) can provide communities with updated information on existing village assets and land ownership for siting projects. The unofficial shelf of works and labor budget developed in conformance with the work demand assessment also corresponded better to the availability of workers for BREGS during the course of the year. In contrast, the corresponding official documents planned for some work provision every month, without reference to worker preferences or allowance for seasonality in agriculture. The team’s qualitative work also highlighted two critical require- ments for planning. First, the process requires reliable and updated information on village land use and ownership. The most recent maps for the two GPs studied dated to the 1960s, resulting in the need for intensive updating through discussions with village revenue officials, local leaders, and community groups to obtain an accurate map of the village. Second, trained facilitators are needed to help communities plan. Though Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and communities have the advantage of local knowledge, they lack the necessary technical tools and capacity to translate this knowledge into concrete plans. Appropriate technical inputs on how to select, sequence, site, and design works are required. The estimation of costs and labor require- ments for each project necessary to develop the overall labor budget for the GP also requires some engineering skills. Most states, including Bihar, face shortages in technical staff for the scheme. Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh have developed ways to deal with this issue. Both states have standardized the specific works that could be carried out under the permissible project types. This standardization has made the preparation of technical estimates for projects easier at the (Continued on the following page) REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 225 Box 8.1 (Continued) village level. Madhya Pradesh provides handbooks for its technical staff to generate work estimates, and Andhra Pradesh has integrated the work estimation module in its computerized management infor- mation system to allow for automated generation of work estimates. With the appropriate technical expertise and community participa- tion, the planning process can deliver a shelf of works and labor bud- get that create assets relevant for the village and have the potential to meet local demand for work. The use of technology, such as GIS for resource mapping, can further provide PRIs and communities with reliable information to plan effectively. GIS can also promote inte- grated planning by facilitating the exchange of information across government schemes as well as facilitate asset monitoring over time. Gujarat has used GIS to develop composite village maps with infor- mation on natural resources and rural assets created by various departments. These maps are being used by Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme technical staff as a planning tool to position projects based on technical feasibility and to convince local leaders and communities of the rationale for site selection. GIS has also proved useful in eliminating duplication of projects and in facilitating asset maintenance and monitoring. Sources: Development Alternatives 2009; Indian Grameen Services 2009; MART 2010. BREGS and such local area development programs would promote the construction of relevant and durable assets. There are several examples from other Indian states relating to using MGNREGS funds for creating village assets, but with technical expertise (and occasionally material inputs) provided by line departments such as Water Resources (for watershed and irrigation works), Forestry (for plantation-related works), and Agriculture (for works on individual lands). The 2012 MGNREGS guidelines promote this objective by including watershed, agriculture, livestock, fisheries, forestry, and sanitation-related works in the list of permissible MGNREGS projects. Estimating the Demand for Work The shelf of works developed through the planning process is sup- posed to be based on an estimate of labor demand. In practice, the labor budget is typically supply driven and determined by the 226 RIGHT TO WORK? previous year’s performance, with some adjustment based on a rough estimate of likely demand in the current year (Ministry of Rural Development 2011). Workers are likely to demand BREGS work primarily during the lean agricultural season. The BREGS survey data identify the peak months for BREGS work provision as January through June. Little BREGS work is made available during the rainy season (July– September), when agricultural employment is also low for some of the time.11 The PRSs in the surveyed GPs reported that most of the projects permissible under BREGS, with the exception of planta- tions, could not be undertaken for about four months of the year. This gap was usually during the rainy season or after floods (and subsequent waterlogging). In fact, at the time of the survey, BREGS guidelines waived the employment guarantee between mid-June and mid-October, and the state was not obliged to provide work or unemployment allowances during this period. The central ministry’s revisions to operational guidelines in 2012 include undertaking a baseline survey of job card holders in every GP before preparing a labor budget (Ministry of Rural Development 2013). Some states, such as Andhra Pradesh, already undertake detailed labor demand assessments at the start of the fiscal year to prepare a calendar of estimated demand for MGNREGS during the course of the year (see box 8.1). Bihar is attempting something similar through partnerships with nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and community-based organizations. The Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangathan (an organization of village-level youth clubs) was engaged in 2011 to carry out a survey to increase knowledge of the scheme as well as to explicitly record requests for job cards and demand for work. However, the presence of active youth clubs is patchy across the state, and their capacity to undertake this work is limited. Another promising channel is through the village organiza- tions created under the National Rural Livelihood Mission. These groups have the potential to canvass preferences, at least among their self-help group member households, and to help create a cal- endar for BREGS work demand. Incorporating this exercise into the planning process and informing workers of the proposed labor budget at an appropriate time (before household labor supply and migration decisions are made) would allow the supply side to be more responsive to demand. Supplying Work Matching the expression of demand with the supply of worksites is key to fulfilling the employment guarantee. We find evidence of REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 227 delays in opening worksites, frequent closures of worksites, and interruption of work in both rounds of the survey. In 33 percent of the surveyed GPs, PRSs reported delays in starting work in round 1 (R1); this figure rose to 43 percent in R2. Several factors could contribute to such delays, such as the absence of approved works that can be quickly initiated in response to demand, insufficient or untimely funding, and inadequate staff for initiating and managing worksites. We examine the first reason here; the latter two factors are examined in the next section, which addresses systemic con- straints to BREGS delivery. In the absence of a ready shelf of works with at least some approved projects, GPs may be constrained in providing work in response to demand. We find that 11 percent of GPs in R2 did not have a shelf of works (an increase from 6 percent in R1). As seen in chapter 3, the presence of a ready shelf of works in GPs was a strong predictor of participation among poor households. Qualitative research for this book reveals significant delays in obtaining the necessary sanctions for the shelf of works proposed by GPs. For instance, in two GPs in Kishanganj district in 2008, it took three to five months to get the necessary approvals from the block and district elected bodies (Development Alternatives 2009; Sunai 2009). Even when an approved shelf of works exists in the GP, adminis- trative and technical sanctions for a specific project must be obtained before a worksite can be opened. This requirement can introduce further delays in the process. For instance, it took 20–35 days to open road construction projects in the two GPs noted above. In one of them, the entire sanctioning process took so long that the rainy season began and work had to be delayed for another four months (Sunai 2009).12 In general, insufficient attention is paid to the sequencing and timing of projects. For instance, projects like water harvesting and flood proofing require ample time for the nec- essary preparatory work, group formation, and consensus building. Breaking ground on such projects just before the monsoons often results in unfinished assets. In fact, interviews with block officials and PRSs in the surveyed GPs reveal that the problem of intermittent closure of worksites was common and became worse between the two survey rounds. The proportion of GPs reporting work interruptions in at least some of the worksites rose from 44 percent in R1 to 73 percent in R2. This impression is corroborated by the experience of BREGS workers: in both rounds, nearly half of the sample of men and women work- ers reported interruptions to work at the worksite at which they last worked, often more than once.13 However, even when house- hold members reported interruption of work at the last worksite, 228 RIGHT TO WORK? 80 percent of participating households in R1 felt that public works were an available coping mechanism for responding to shocks. By R2, this proportion had fallen to only 57 percent of households, possibly reflecting the increase in the frequency of work interrup- tion. In R1, the main reasons given for work stoppage were rains or flooding. Though these reasons remained important in R2, strikes by workers and work stoppage by officials had become much more widespread. The latter is likely linked to the availability of funds and is examined in the next section. Disputes with farmers were also cited in some of the GPs, perhaps pointing to conflicts over common land. Worksite Management We also find departures from the scheme guidelines in the manage- ment of worksites and the provision of facilities to workers. For instance, contractors are not allowed under BREGS guidelines; instead, the PRS is expected to function as the agent who mobilizes workers and manages the worksite, with the help of the mate.14 As seen in table 8.2, we find that the ban on contractors is not being enforced—more than half of male and female workers reported the presence of contractors at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked in R1, and even more in R2. The majority of workers also Table 8.2 Participant Reports about the Worksite Round 1 Round 2 Participants answering positively that the following Men Women Men Women are true (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent) Contractor is on site 52.0 54.1 59.4 62.9 Mate is on site 90.4 79.1 87.8 85.7 Machines are used 39.0 49.0 7.6 7.3 Muster roll is on site 65.8 61.5 70.3 68.9 Attendance is taken on site 94.0 94.4 90.1 90.0 Used own tools 95.7 95.9 92.6 92.6 Site is within own village 67.3 68.1 71.7 74.3 Site is within 5 km 98.6 96.0 99.1 99.5 Money was paid to get work or wages 16.6 19.4 21.5 10.8 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on responses by workers at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked. km = kilometers. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 229 report a mate being present. It is not entirely clear whether work- ers fully understand the difference between the two because both carry out similar functions with only the nature of their contract with the GP (the implementing agency) being different. There could thus be some double counting and over- or underestimation of the presence of mates or contractors based on the responses of workers in the surveys. The rationale for banning contractor involvement in BREGS is to reduce corruption and exploitation. A survey of six North Indian states finds that worksites where contractors are present are more likely to have fudged muster rolls,15 and experienced greater exploi- tation and harassment of women (Drèze and Khera 2009). However, contractors also bring project management expertise. PRSs and mates often lack the capacity to successfully mobilize workers on a fixed schedule to complete the work and build assets of reasonable qual- ity. Because the mate is responsible for day-to-day management of the worksite, this is a critical gap and has implications for the quality of assets being created under the scheme. A concerted effort needs to be made to build the capacity of the PRS and the mate to enable them to undertake this task. This strengthening could potentially include redefining norms for mate selection, providing appropriate technical training and the necessary tools, and providing incentives for performance. The use of machines at worksites is reported by workers, although the incidence of cases reported declined from 39 percent and 49 percent of men and women, respectively, at the last BREGS worksite in R1 to 8 percent of men and 7 percent of women workers in R2 (table 8.2). It is not clear whether these are labor-displacing machines (which is the specific category of machines banned). Nearly everyone reports using their own tools for earthwork rather than being supplied with tools at the worksite. Fewer than two-thirds of male and female workers report that a muster roll was maintained at the last worksite at which they worked, with an increasing trend over time. But almost all workers in both rounds reported attendance (in some format) was taken on a daily basis. Worksites were located in workers’ villages in more than two-thirds of all cases and practi- cally always within 5 kilometers, as prescribed by the guidelines. Mandated worksite facilities are frequently not provided. The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act entitles workers to basic facilities such as drinking water, shade, first aid, and child care at which women can leave their children when there are more than five children under age six at the worksite. In practice, these facili- ties are often not present. The exception is the provision of drink- ing water—in R2, nearly half of men and women workers reported 230 RIGHT TO WORK? Figure 8.2 Worksite Facilities in Round 2 100 80 percentage of participants 60 45.3 47.0 39.9 40 31.5 20.7 20 10.5 15.7 20.8 13.0 4.7 0 child care drinking water shade first aid kit information board men women Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Percentage of participants reporting that the worksite at which they last worked had the facilities. Based on round 2 responses by workers at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked. its availability at the BREGS worksites at which they last worked (see figure 8.2), which was a somewhat lower share than in R1. Women workers reported an increase in the provision of most facili- ties, including child care facilities, between the two rounds (from 13 percent to 21 percent). The lack of such facilities can discourage women from participating in the scheme (Sunai 2009). Wage Payments The scheme’s guidelines require that wages be paid within 15 days of the last day worked. However, the evidence points to delays in wage payments. These delays also discourage participation and reduce the overall impact on poverty. The survey asked workers how long they had to wait to be paid wages after completing work at the last worksite at which they worked (table 8.3). In R1, 76 percent of men and 79 percent of women workers reported having been paid their expected wages in full at the BREGS worksite. Of course, it should be noted that the amount received may not be equal to the amount owed them had they been paid the stipulated BREGS wage (see chapter 4 for a discussion of wage level shortfalls).16 In R2, the percentages were 76 percent and 71 percent. Other workers had either received par- tial payments and were still waiting for the rest, or had not been paid at all by the time of the survey. The latter was true for 13 percent and 14 percent of men, and of 10 percent and 24 percent of women across R1 and R2, respectively. Among those who had REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 231 Table 8.3 Time Taken for Payment of Wages after Work Completion Round 1 Round 2 Participants reporting the Men Women Men Women following (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent) Payment not yet received 13.2 10.2 14.1 24.3 Partial payment received 11.3 11.2 9.7 5.0 Full payment received 75.5 78.6 76.2 70.7 Of which, workers received payments in the following period after completing work Daily 15.7 18.3 13.3 6.8 Some amount daily and a lump sum later 20.9 33.9 7.4 4.5 Between 1 and 15 days 52.2 26.5 59.9 70.1 Between 16 and 30 days 7.4 13.2 8.5 6.4 More than one month 3.8 8.2 10.9 12.2 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on responses by workers at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked. Note that the reference to full payment received reflects merely that workers reported no outstanding payments, even though they may not have received the full stipulated scheme wage (see chapter 4). received the entire amount expected, about 11 percent of men and 21 percent of women had waited for more than 15 days to be paid in full in R1. By R2, delays beyond 15 days had risen to 19 percent among men and women, with 11 percent of men and 12 percent of women waiting more than one month. Thus, the evidence points to long delays as well as partial payments. At first glance, the high pro- portion of workers reporting either daily wages or some daily outlay with a lump sum paid subsequently is puzzling. Next we speculate on possible explanations for this occurrence. There could be several reasons for delayed wage payments. On paper, the payment process is supposed to be as follows: wages due to BREGS workers are estimated on the basis of productivity norms set forth in the rural Schedule of Rates.17 Scheme function- aries are required to ensure productivity norms are being met by measuring the work done at the worksite. On the basis of the mus- ter roll and work measurement, a payment order is generated that directs banks and post offices to credit worker accounts with the specified wage. Funds are then transferred from the implementing 232 RIGHT TO WORK? agency’s bank account to workers’ bank or post office accounts. This cycle is supposed to take no more than 15 days after work completion. In practice, a number of bottlenecks in these processes in Bihar result in delayed payments. First, holdups often occur in the measurement of work (Development Alternatives 2009; Indian Grameen Services 2009; Sunai 2009). Second, the flow of funds to GPs is erratic and frequently delayed. In both rounds of the BREGS survey, PRSs in the surveyed GPs reported problems of insufficient funds and funds not being available in time. In more than half of the surveyed GPs (52 percent in R1 and 67 percent in R2), these problems were cited as contributing to delays in paying wages to workers. (This issue is explored in more detail in the next section, which focuses on systemic constraints such as weak financial management capacity.) Third, the payment of wages through workers’ bank or post office accounts rather than directly in cash adds to the processing time. Since April 2008, the scheme guidelines mandate a move toward financial inclusion with full reliance on payments through personal accounts with finan- cial institutions. But practice is still a long way from that ideal because of the sparse presence and inadequate capacity of financial institutions in rural areas. In rural Bihar, bank coverage is patchy. In R2, nearly 60 percent of the villages in the sample reported that the nearest bank was more than 5 kilometers distant. Post offices are more accessible: almost all sample villages reported one within 5 kilometers and nearly a quarter of the villages had a post office within the village itself. But most village post offices are small, typically operated by a single postman, and lack the capacity to deal regularly with large volumes of transactions. Nor are they linked to the core banking system that facilitates interbank electronic funds transfers and through which payments can be directly transferred from the implementing agency’s BREGS bank account to workers’ bank accounts. In the case of post office accounts, funds are transferred first to the district post office before being redirected to the local village-level post offices where worker accounts are held. As a result, payments through post offices introduce further delays.18 In fact, we find that more than half of all rural households in Bihar had neither bank nor post office accounts in R2 (see table 8.4). Although the PRS is tasked with helping BREGS workers open bank or post office accounts (at least one per household), about 53 percent of participating households had neither in R1. By R2, this number had fallen to 30 percent. However, the absence of an account does not necessarily constrain households from getting work—fewer than REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 233 1 percent of men and women excess demanders (those who wanted work but did not get it) cited the lack of a bank or post office account as the main reason for not getting work in each round. The large number of households remaining without bank or post office accounts explains why workers continue to report wage pay- ments made in cash. When asked about the worksite at which they last worked, more than two-thirds of workers, both men and women, reported cash payments in R2 (see table 8.5). For women, however, this represented an improvement from R1, when the majority of women workers (89 percent) reported payment in cash at their last worksite. Naturally, nearly all workers without an account reported cash payments. But even among those belonging to households with Table 8.4 Percentage of Rural Households with Accounts at Financial Institutions Round 1 Round 2 All BREGS All BREGS households households households households Bank account 24.8 23.0 28.2 24.1 Post office account 6.8 19.9 12.3 35.3 Both 2.2 4.0 5.1 10.6 Neither 66.2 53.1 54.4 30.0 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on responses in the household questionnaire. Table 8.5 Percentage of Participants Reporting Wage Payments through Various Sources at the Last Worksite Round 1 Round 2 Payment source Men Women Men Women Post office accounts 12.5 7.5 27.6 25.5 Bank accounts 10.5 3.5 5.8 5.5 Cash Mukhiya 27.7 40.0 25.4 29.6 Mate 13.0 14.7 10.9 8.8 Contractor 18.2 20.4 17.5 21.2 Officials (PRS and others) 11.4 11.1 9.5 8.8 Other 6.6 2.9 3.2 0.7 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on responses by workers at the BREGS worksite at which they last worked. 234 RIGHT TO WORK? at least one bank or post office account, more than half the workers, both men and women, reported payments in cash.19 By contrast, the PRSs interviewed in the BREGS survey reported that the majority of wage payments are made through worker accounts. In fact, as discussed in chapter 4, qualitative research for this report suggests that delays in fund transfers to worker bank accounts can sometimes lead to the Mukhiya or other functionar- ies acting as intermediaries and making partial advance payments in cash. These cash advances are paid on a daily basis, in line with usual practice for agricultural casual work, but are typically less than the stipulated scheme wage. Wage payments in the workers’ accounts are then transferred to the intermediary when they are received. The difference between the daily wage paid in advance and that stipulated by the scheme and eventually received through the workers’ accounts is then pocketed by the intermediary.20 As seen in chapter 7 (box 7.1), workers’ passbooks and job cards are sometimes in the possession of the Mukhiya, the PRS, or some other official or middleman, leaving room for manipulation and leakage. This is a potential explanation for why many workers report receiv- ing daily wages as mentioned earlier and as shown in table 8.3. Understanding the Supply-Side Constraints on Delivery Ensuring adherence to the scheme’s operational guidelines and trans- parency safeguards requires appropriate institutional structures with skilled and motivated staff, adequate and timely funds, and robust systems for monitoring and grievance redress. The central govern- ment provides 6 percent of MGNREGS expenditures to states to cover the nonwage, nonmaterial costs incurred in implementing the scheme. Yet in 2009/10, Bihar spent about 643 million rupees (Rs), amounting to only about 3.5 percent of total scheme expenditures. This is not because Bihar does not need the extra money. More plausibly, the underspending of the central government’s allocation for these other costs reflects the same administrative constraints that have created the rationing documented in previous chapters, as well as other deficiencies in the scheme’s performance. This section exam- ines those constraints. Staffing and Capacity The BREGS guidelines call for a dedicated cadre of professional administrative and technical staff to implement the scheme. Significant human resources are required at the village level to register REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 235 households, record every work application, mobilize households to participate in the planning of works, obtain necessary approvals, and initiate work in response to demand, manage and oversee work- sites, and ensure timely wage payments. The scheme also places a heavy emphasis on reporting.21 Whereas the district-level function- aries (the district magistrate, the deputy district coordinator, block development officers, and the assistant engineers) are government officers, the rest of the BREGS staff (including junior engineers and PRSs) consists of contract workers. When the scheme was first introduced, many states experienced significant delays in appointing contract staff, and Bihar was no exception (Comptroller and Auditor General 2008). In many dis- tricts, the existing block development officers were required to per- form the program officer (PO) function. The appointment of GP-level PRSs also took time. Extensive recruitment in 2007 and subsequently has led to the filling of these district, block, and panchayat positions. Administrative data indicate that all districts now have a dedicated officer for BREGS, but that vacancies remained significant at the block and GP levels, even in 2011—16 percent of the 534 blocks in the state did not have a PO; 9 percent of GPs in the state did not have a PRS; and 30 percent of GP clusters did not have a panchayat technical assistant (there is supposed to be one for every four GPs).22 The issue of technical staff vacancies is reflected in the responses of block officials interviewed in the BREGS survey—although almost all block officials report an average of about 14 PRSs per block (nearly one PRS per GP given that a block has about 15 GPs on average), the majority report only one or two junior engineers and panchayat technical assistants per block. The staffing levels improved between the two survey rounds, but adequate technical staff remains a concern. As many as 73 percent of POs and 80 per- cent of junior engineers in R1 felt the available BREGS staff in the block was inadequate and contributed to delays in opening work- sites, work measurement, and payment of wages. Even in R2, about 66 percent of POs and 56 percent of junior engineers felt more staff was needed. At the GP level, however, only 9 percent of interviewed PRSs viewed staffing as a constraint. In 2011, the government of Bihar established an autonomous society, the Bihar Rural Development Society, for BREGS implemen- tation. The society seeks to attract experienced government officers and private sector professionals to implement the scheme. Current BREGS staff at the district and lower levels will come under the purview of the Bihar Rural Development Society, opening greater avenues for these contract staff with respect to career development and growth. 236 RIGHT TO WORK? Building capacity among BREGS staff and Panchayati Raj Institution (PRI) representatives is a key priority. Field studies high- light low capacity among BREGS staff at the block and village levels, particularly with respect to participatory planning, development of labor budgets, and demand registration. In addition, the scheme guidelines assign a central role to PRIs in BREGS implementation, including planning, execution, and oversight (see box 8.2). BREGS alone required an average GP in Bihar to manage approximately Rs 2.2 million in 2009/10.23 However, their capacity to perform Box 8.2 The Role of the Mukhiya The Mukhiya continues to play an integral role in the implementation of the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS), acting as the representative of both the workers on one side and the local government on the other. The panchayat rozgar sewak (PRS) and the Mukhiya bear joint responsibility for scheme implementation. The Mukhiya is responsi- ble for preparing the village plans and can also sanction small works costing up to Rs 5 lakhs.a Together, the Mukhiya and PRS are tasked with jointly operating BREGS bank accounts and managing pay- ments. The PRS is responsible for registering demand, facilitating planning and work sanction, supervising worksites, and maintaining records. However, in practice, the Mukhiya frequently carries out these functions; scheme performance often depends on the level of the Mukhiya’s commitment. Because the Mukhiya is the local leader and the PRS is an outsider to the Gram Panchayat (GP), possibilities are opened up for conflict or collusion. Information. Both qualitative studies and the BREGS survey indi- cate that the Mukhiya and other GP members (such as ward mem- bers) remain an important source of information about the availability of BREGS works. In round 2 of the BREGS survey, about 45 percent of men and 29 percent of women workers listed Panchayati Raj Institution (PRI) representatives as the main source of information about the worksite at which they last worked. About 26 percent of male and 20 percent of female workers reported that they had been called to the worksite by the Mukhiya or other PRI representative. Qualitative studies indicate that demand for work is often informally made to the Mukhiya. Participation. In a third of the GPs surveyed in the BREGS survey, the GP’s official work is carried out at the Mukhiya’s house. This could potentially constrain the ability of different groups to register for job cards or apply for work, depending on caste and political (Continued on the following page) REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 237 Box 8.2 (Continued) affiliation. In addition, the local political connections and character- istics of the Mukhiya him- or herself can influence participation (see chapter 3). Thus, households in villages in which the Mukhiya has held a GP post in the past, is a contractor, and lives in the village are more likely to get BREGS work. Work execution. According to the scheme guidelines, the mate in charge of worksite management is to be chosen by the Gram Sabha. But more often than not, the mate is selected by the Mukhiya. The mates perform the project management function of contractors to a large extent in that they mobilize workers, record attendance, oversee and manage the worksite, and record preliminary work measure- ments. Qualitative research indicates that mates are not always held accountable because of their connections to the Mukhiya. Source: Authors’ observations and estimates from the Bihar Rural Employ- ment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. a. One lakh = Rs 100,000. these functions is weak. Both the scheme staff and PRI represen- tatives also often lack clarity on the modifications to the scheme guidelines that are periodically issued by the state. Training and technical support to the scheme staff and PRI rep- resentatives, particularly at the village level, is critically important. This support includes, for example, building capacity for better financial management, participatory resource planning, and project management functions. But developing an ongoing system for the training of about 13,000 contract BREGS workers and PRI repre- sentatives in 534 blocks and 8,463 GPs is not an easy task. In fact, findings from the BREGS survey suggest a lower emphasis on train- ing in R2 compared with R1. Both the POs and PRSs report, on average, a lower number of training sessions and fewer days spent in training in R2. Financial Management Because MGNREGS is a centrally sponsored scheme, the central government funds the bulk of the states’ MGNREGS expenditures. As noted previously, the central government also finances up to 6 per- cent of the state government expenditures on MGNREGS, including salaries of contract workers, training, and information technology (IT) monitoring systems. As with other centrally sponsored schemes, 238 RIGHT TO WORK? funds are transferred directly from the central ministry to districts. For BREGS, unlike other centrally sponsored schemes, PRIs at the district, block, and GP levels are implementing agencies and play an important role in managing scheme funds. Given the multiple agen- cies and government levels involved in managing the flow of funds, it is critical for Bihar to have a well-functioning financial management system to keep track of funds’ transfer and use. MGNREGS funds are released by the central Ministry of Rural Development on the basis of state proposals rather than predeter- mined allocations. These annual state work plans and budget pro- posals are supposed to be an aggregation of demand for funds from the districts (based on the estimated shelf of works and labor bud- get). In practice, the initially released central funds are also linked to actual utilization in the previous fiscal year. Funds are released directly to districts in two (or more) tranches. On paper, the initial tranche in the beginning of the fiscal year is based on the submitted district-level labor budget projections.24 Once the central funds are released, the state allocation is also released. This initial allocation provides the necessary advance funds to initiate BREGS works. The second (and subsequent) tranches are released once the districts submit utilization certificates indicating that 60 per- cent of the initial allocation has been exhausted. An audit report is also required if the certificates are submitted after September. Funds are to be transferred to the district within 15 days of submission of the utilization certificate, provided the certificates are found to be accurate. Districts are then required to transfer funds to the imple- menting agency accounts at the district, block, and GP levels. In practice, both qualitative research and the BREGS survey find evidence of significant delays in the transfer of funds to GPs. As seen in table 8.6, substantial improvement occurred by R2, but 36 per- cent of PRSs still reported inadequate funds. Even if sufficient funds Table 8.6 Flow of Funds Round 1 Round 2 (percent) (percent) PRSs reporting insufficient funds in past year 61.1 36.3 PRSs reporting funds not available on time in past yeara — 64.1 Source: Estimates based on the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) survey. Note: Based on panchayat rozgar sewak (PRS) responses in the Gram Panchayat questionnaires. — = not available. a. This question was not asked in R1. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 239 were available on average, they were not necessarily available on time, as reported by PRSs in 64 percent of the surveyed GPs in R2. In the majority of GPs in which these instances were reported, this resulted in delays in starting work, in making wage payments to workers, and in paying government functionaries. Delays can occur at any or all of three stages: the transfer of funds from the central ministry to districts; the release of the state share to districts; and the transfer of funds from the district to the GPs. We analyzed administrative data on the request for and receipt of central and state funds by districts in 2010/11 to identify bottle- necks in the flow of funds.25 Given the somewhat patchy condition of these data, this analysis can only be indicative of the nature of delays and shortfalls in fund transfers between the central ministry and the districts. We find that, for all 38 districts, the sanction of the first tranche by the Ministry of Rural Development occurs within two days of the request being made (typically at the start of the fiscal year in April). Very little delay in receipt of the first tranche from the central min- istry seems to have occurred for the 25 districts for which we have information. On average, funds were received within 17 days from the sanctioning of the first tranche; the maximum time was 30 days. By mid-May, all 25 districts for which we have this information had received the first tranche. However, there were delays in the release of subsequent tranches. The second tranche was received by 29 districts by July or August 2010, another three districts received funds by September or October, while the remaining five districts received funds only in January or February 2011. During this period, some districts made repeated requests for funds. In the 19 districts for which we have informa- tion on the dates of both tranches, the average gap between the two tranches was 115 days. We do not have information at the district level on the additional time it may have taken for these funds to reach GPs. However, a field visit to a block in Bhojpur district indicated further delays in trans- ferring funds to GPs: in October 2010, about 181 GPs (83 percent of GPs in the district) had less than Rs 1 lakh in available funds at the time.26 The peak BREGS season is the first quarter of the calendar year, so delays in the receipt of funds until this time make it difficult for GPs to open worksites. Furthermore, low funds availability also leads to prioritization of smaller works with estimated costs of less than Rs 1 lakh. An additional concern is the shortfall between the amount requested by districts and that received in each tranche from the central ministry. In all of Bihar’s 38 districts, the amounts received 240 RIGHT TO WORK? were significantly lower than that requested. For instance, the aver- age labor budget was Rs 1,162 million while the average amount received in the first tranche was Rs 188 million. Combined with the funds already available at the district level from the previous year, these disbursements amounted to only 28 percent of the requested labor budget. On paper, the first tranche can be up to 50 percent of the labor budget. However, in 2010/11, the actual amount released was based on the expenditures during the first six months of the previous fis- cal year. This amount was released only if all documentation for the previous year was complete; otherwise only a partial amount was released. Districts then had to request release of the remaining amount of the first tranche. Linking the current release to expenditures in the previous year is a problem in a demand-driven scheme such as BREGS, particularly when current circumstances (such as a drought) may result in higher demand than in the previous year. By the end of fiscal year 2010/11, the amount released combined with the amount available from the previous fiscal year came to only about 60 percent on average of the labor budget requested. The main cause for these delays and shortfalls appears to be the limited financial management capacity at the district and lower levels. For instance, the above data indicate that shortfalls in the amounts released varied substantially across districts, ranging from 18 percent of the labor budget in Madhubani to 91 percent in Muzaffarpur. This variance likely reflects the differences in capacity across districts, blocks, and GPs for managing funds and prepar- ing accurate reports on use. Delays in the submission of accurate documentation by any one GP can delay the entire district’s receipt of funds. In addition to the problems of insufficient and untimely funds availability, Bihar has often been unable to fully absorb available resources (central and state) in the past. This was the case when BREGS was first introduced. In 2006/07, expenditure as a share of total available funds was only 38 percent. Utilization rates have improved significantly since then; in 2010/11, about 82 percent of available resources were spent. This improvement occurred even as the total quantum of resources increased more than 2.5 times. However, expenditures on the scheme can be expected to increase even further as the delivery system becomes more responsive to the currently unmet demand. In the future, addressing the varying capacities of districts to absorb available funds will be critical. As figure 8.3 indicates, not only do utilization rates vary across districts, they also vary from year to year within districts. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 241 Figure 8.3 Utilization of Available Resources across Districts Annual scheme expenditures as a percentage of total available funds 100 90 80 70 percent 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 G gusa n E.Copal rai mp j Su a... Sh Mun ul hp r Va ura Na ishali Bh ada Jeh Ga a an ya Ma Sheo ad La huba r kh ni Siwrai Da Pa an W. rbha tna a Sit mp… Ka hi Au Ja har Kis gab i ha … lan j A da Bh gar a aga ia Ro pur Pu tas B a Bh anka Ar ur Sam ha al ast rsa Mu Bu r Ma zaffa ar dh r… ra ha gun ran mu Na gan eik ge d ha ipu u Ch ng Kh rari rne Be Sara w pa r x epu ojp ab b isa a h ti l w a am n a a a S 2009/10 2010/11 Source: Monthly Progress Reports, Rural Development Department, government of Bihar. Several initiatives are under way to improve financial manage- ment. Because funds are transferred directly from the center to the districts, the state’s administrative role to date has been somewhat limited to coordinating between the districts and the central ministry. In recent years, the Rural Development Department, government of Bihar, has increased its oversight of the flow of funds and has intro- duced systems for better financial management. The government has mandated the appointment of a funds manager in each district to manage releases to GPs and simultaneously introduced a system of fortnightly monitoring of funds available to GPs. The objective is to ensure that no GP has a balance of less than Rs 1 lakh at any time. Transfers are made on the basis of these reports, with utilization certificates being submitted subsequently. The government also rec- ognizes the need to build financial management capacity simultane- ously at the district and lower levels. A State Employment Guarantee Fund has also been established according to the provisions of the national guidelines. Once this state-level corpus fund is fully functional, funds from the central government are expected to be transferred to it and then directly to GPs, thereby reducing the delays that occur in transfers from the district to GPs. In addition, a rolling fund has been provided to minimize delays in wage payments to workers through paying agen- cies, whether it be post office or bank accounts or other modality of payment. 242 RIGHT TO WORK? An IT-enabled system for centralized funds management was also introduced in 2010. This system provides access to informa- tion on BREGS account balances in the more than 9,000 district, block, and GP implementing-agency bank accounts on a nearly real-time basis. As a result, the state is able to monitor and respond when cash balances in BREGS accounts in GPs fall too low. This system has introduced transparency in BREGS financial manage- ment and enabled the state to monitor and manage its resources across districts. In addition, the modifications planned with respect to accounting applications should also facilitate accurate and timely creation of utilization certificates by districts. These two initiatives—creating a state level corpus fund and putting in place a centralized funds management system—are expected to smooth funds flows to implementing agencies and sim- plify accounting requirements at local levels, thereby limiting one potential source of the rationing of work. Monitoring There is a strong emphasis on monitoring in BREGS, in contrast with previous such schemes. The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act provides for several mechanisms to increase transparency and accountability. Intensive monitoring and evaluation of program out- comes is therefore critical to learning whether the strengthened pro- visions have had the intended impact. In Bihar, BREGS implementation is monitored largely through monthly and fortnightly progress reports submitted by districts and through monthly review meetings. These monthly meetings are held at the block, district, and state levels to review progress and resolve bottlenecks in the delivery of the scheme. The scheme guidelines call for Vigilance Committees to be established in all GPs. However, these committees rarely exist or function. Field- based process and outcome monitoring is limited, partly as a result of the absence of a clearly defined strategy and partly because of the lack of capacity. Social audits are mandated by the scheme guidelines, but, as in most states, progress in undertaking such audits has been slow. The few instances in which NGOs have mobi- lized communities for social audits in some districts in Bihar have unearthed discrepancies. The monthly progress reports are district-wide reports on pre- defined indicators of financial and physical progress in implementing the scheme. The reports are sent by districts to the state and uploaded on the national website (http://nrega.nic.in) in the first week of every month. Although a useful source of information on progress, there REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 243 are two areas of concern. First, only aggregate data, such as the total number of households provided employment and the number of person days of employment generated, are available at different administrative levels. Detailed data are not available because these district-wide reports are compiled using block-level reports, which, in turn, are aggregated using GP-level reports submitted by PRSs. It is not possible to track beneficiary-level information through this system. Second, information submitted in the reports is not verified in the field. The PRS is tasked with maintaining the various documents used for this purpose, including registers for recording applications, job card distribution, beneficiary accounts opened, employment provision, receipt of muster rolls (for attendance), works executed, and grievances received. The PRS is also required to maintain the cashbook (for recording funds receipts and expenditures). Technical staff are responsible for maintaining the measurement book for recording work done and wages paid. However, there is no clear mechanism at the block level to verify the authenticity of data in the monthly reports by checking these documents. Field visits to blocks in four districts—Darbhanga, Jehanabad, Madhubani, and Nalanda—indicated that random checks of documents are conducted in some blocks, but that it is not a uniform practice. Fieldwork for the BREGS survey and other field visits also highlighted the difficulty of obtaining a complete record of scheme performance because some documents were available with the PRS, others with the Mukhiya, and some not at all. In contrast, the national MGNREGS Management Information System (MIS)—NREGAsoft (available online at http://nrega.nic.in)— makes data available on the scheme at the beneficiary level. However, the level of disaggregated information required, the large number and frequency of transactions to be recorded, and the limited IT infra- structure at the block and lower levels present a challenge to making information available in a timely fashion. For instance, because of the lack of adequate IT support and connectivity at the block level, hard copies of documents such as muster rolls and measurement books must be brought to the district headquarters by the PRSs for data entry into the MIS. As a result, there is a significant time lag before the data are available online. The timeliness of this information has improved because the transfer of funds from the central ministry to districts has now been linked to the information available on the MIS. However, the design of NREGAsoft is such that all transactions (such as the issuance of job cards or recording attendance on the mus- ter roll) remain paper based. Once the paper transaction is complete, data are entered offline and subsequently made publicly available. 244 RIGHT TO WORK? In contrast, a transactions-based MIS would make data entry manda- tory at the same time the transaction itself is processed (for example, a job card would be printed and issued only when the relevant infor- mation is recorded in the MIS). This would make data available in real time so that they can be used to inform management decisions. Andhra Pradesh has been using a transactions-based IT system since the introduction of the scheme in 2006. Grievance Redress Mechanisms Bihar has made a commitment to making the BREGS delivery mech- anism more accountable to the public and citizens can submit griev- ances through multiple channels.27 Citizens can submit grievances related to BREGS in person, in writing, by telephone, or through public meetings (janta durbars). The chief minister, as well as most government functionaries at the state and district levels, holds public meetings every week at which citizens can voice their grievances and register petitions (about BREGS as well as other issues). Field visits to Madhubani district in 2011 indicated that about 80 to 120 com- plaints, on average, were received at the district meeting and that it took at least three months to complete the entire grievance redress process at the district level. An Information and Public Grievance Cell has been established to receive and follow up on complaints received at the state-level meetings. BREGS-related complaints are then forwarded to the rel- evant authorities for redress. Bihar has also introduced the statewide Bihar Public Grievance Redress System that works directly under the supervision of the chief minister’s secretariat. This system regis- ters complaints on BREGS and other issues received from different sources (including public meetings and the online portal) and directs it to the relevant authority for redress. BREGS-related grievances can also be received verbally or in writing. At the block level, the PO maintains a grievance register to record complaints. Often, verbal complaints go unrecorded and only the complaints received by the PO in writing are recorded. To deal with this issue, a call center was piloted to record verbal grievances and to ensure that grievances are resolved quickly and efficiently. To be effective, the call center needs to be more closely integrated with the Rural Development Department’s grievance redress process. The above channels have enabled proper registration of com- plaints, but further work is required to promote a coordinated and effective response to address the reported grievances. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 245 Learning from Experiences Elsewhere The experiences of similar public works programs in other coun- tries, such as Argentina and Colombia, is instructive. For instance, the Trabajar program in Argentina uses standardized designs for projects and relies on monthly meetings to approve and priori- tize project proposals, including for projects proposed by NGOs. Colombia carries out a series of spot checks to assess how the pro- gram procedures are being carried out. In both cases, beneficiary- level data (rather than just aggregate information by district) are available for monitoring. In addition, innovations in implementing MGNREGS are emerg- ing in many states across India, and there are opportunities for learn- ing from these experiences. The main innovations are with respect to streamlining planning processes, improving worksite management, making timely wage payments, and ensuring transparency. Several states have introduced various innovations to strengthen the planning process in a manner that is best suited to the state- specific context. For instance, Kerala has used its strong PRIs to promote decentralized, comprehensive planning for village assets. Andhra Pradesh has leveraged its relatively decentralized admin- istrative structure and its mature network of self-help groups and village organizations for community mobilization and participatory planning. These groups undertake annual labor demand assessments and land surveys to determine the village assets to be created and the availability of labor for MGNREGS during the course of the year. As noted earlier (box 8.1), Gujarat is piloting the use of geographic information systems for village resource mapping to provide commu- nities with the appropriate technical inputs for planning purposes. Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh have developed standardized work estimates for a wide range of MGNREGS works to overcome technical staff shortages at the village level. States such as Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh encourage communities to plan MGNREGS works to be undertaken sequentially across identified areas within a village rather than simultaneously in scattered locations across the village. In each of these areas within a village, a comprehensive set of works is undertaken in a logical sequence. With respect to worksite management practices, states such as Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan have introduced the concept of fixed labor groups that work together on worksites. Such groups can help mobilize workers and enable them to collectively voice their demands and improve work efficiency. Moving to group measurement of work at the site suggests that wages can vary depending on group 246 RIGHT TO WORK? effort, thereby providing incentives to monitor individual effort within the group. The number of group members varies; Andhra Pradesh has groups of 10 to 30 members, while Rajasthan promotes 5-member groups. The process of group formation also varies across states. In Andhra Pradesh, group members are typically workers who have worked together on more than one worksite for at least 10 days. To prevent exclusion in the group formation process, work is allocated separately to general groups and to those with disabled individuals. In contrast, Rajasthan allows workers to form their own groups. Field visits to these states suggest that there is greater owner- ship among workers that work in groups, but further mobilization and awareness generation would be required, in partnership with NGOs and community-based organizations (MART 2010). In addition, several states have introduced various mechanisms for the selection, training, and performance management of mates who are responsible for managing worksites in lieu of contractors. Some states, such as Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, maintain per- manent pools of mates per GP, with worksite allocation on a rotat- ing basis. Andhra Pradesh has an incentive-linked payment system for mates to encourage better performance. Rajasthan provides a tool kit to mates to help them in record keeping and measurement at the worksite (MART 2010). Some states have successfully streamlined the flow of funds to implementing agencies and set up appropriate disbursement mecha- nisms to ensure timely wage payments. For instance, Andhra Pradesh has a centralized electronic funds management system that allows near-real-time tracking and funds management across implementing agencies. Full integration of this system with the management infor- mation system and a tightly monitored delivery process ensures that wage payments are made within a week of work completion. Some states, including Madhya Pradesh, make advance funds available (linked to the volume of estimated MGNREGS work) to GPs, thus making it easier to open worksites in response to demand. Others have placed advance funds, or a “float,” with post offices to enable wages to be paid into beneficiary accounts while waiting for funds to be transferred from the implementing agencies. Several states have put mechanisms in place for strengthened monitoring, transparency, and accountability in implementation. For instance, Rajasthan is well known for implementation of vari- ous transparency safeguards. Muster rolls are present at most work- sites, daily attendance is taken in front of workers, wages are paid based on group work and measurement, and job cards are updated at the time of payment. An active civil society, the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan, has strongly encouraged community monitoring REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 247 through social audits. Andhra Pradesh has established a strong IT-enabled management information system to restrict the possibili- ties of corruption and manipulation. This web-based system has a local language interface that handles registration, work planning, worksite management, and wage payments, and allows public access to reliable, timely, and comparable information from the field.28 Andhra Pradesh was the first state to institutionalize social audits as early as 2006, with a focus on follow-up action by the administra- tion in the aftermath of such audits. Tamil Nadu has used admin- istrative monitoring effectively through daily audits of the muster rolls. Inspection officers visit worksites regularly to check the infor- mation reported in the muster rolls, thereby reducing the scope for “ghost workers” (World Bank 2011). In several states (for example, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, and West Bengal), the district admin- istration has partnered with civil society organizations to mobilize communities for demand registration, participatory planning of works, and grievance redress and monitoring (National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations 2009, 2010). These innovations across India present an opportunity for poor states to make the MGNREGS delivery mechanism more responsive to demand and thereby reduce the rationing of work on the scheme. Notes 1. For further discussion of the importance of asset creation to the cost- effectiveness of workfare schemes, see Ravallion (1999). 2. Nearly two-fifths of households reported no Gram Sabha had taken place in the Gram Panchayat (GP) in the year preceding the survey in 2009/10. A further 16 percent of households were unaware of whether a Gram Sabha had been held in their GP. Among households that reported that a Gram Sabha had taken place, about half attended the meeting. In 2009/10, the majority of men (78 percent) and women (86 percent) per- ceived no benefits to participating in Gram Sabhas as they are currently held. 3. See Sunai (2009) and Indian Grameen Services (2009) for Bihar; PRIA (2007) for other states. 4. For a broader discussion of this issue in light of evidence from other programs, see Mansuri and Rao (2013). 5. Note that this could also be attributed, at least in part, to the poor quality of administrative data on assets created under the scheme. The GP questionnaire (see chapter 2) was used to collect data on five assets created under BREGS in the preceding year in the surveyed village. All individual 248 RIGHT TO WORK? respondents were asked questions on these five assets. The study did not survey worksites or investigate the quality of assets. 6. See also Indian Grameen Services (2009). 7. These include projects for water conservation, drought proofing (including plantation and reforestation), minor and micro-irrigation, land development (including on the individual land of Scheduled Tribe and Scheduled Caste households, small and medium-size farmers, and other speci- fied groups), renovation of traditional water bodies, flood control and protec- tion (including drainage in waterlogged areas), rural connectivity, and others. In 2012, the list of permissible projects was expanded to include agriculture, livestock and fisheries, rural sanitation, and watershed-related projects. 8. Flood Management Information System (FMIS), Water Resources Department, government of Bihar, available at http://fmis.bih.nic.in/history .html. There were severe floods in six districts in the two northern zones in 2008/09. In contrast, rainfall was scant during the 2009 monsoons, and drought was declared in 26 districts. 9. Indira Awaas Yojana is a cash transfer to poor rural households to enable them to construct or repair their houses. 10. The Backward Regions Grant Fund is an untied grant to GPs in backward districts that can be used at their discretion for building assets such as roads and school buildings. 11. The survey’s village questionnaire indicates the peak months of agri- cultural activity in Bihar to be March and April (wheat harvest), June– August (paddy planting), and October–December (paddy harvest and wheat sowing). 12. States such as Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Rajasthan have made concerted efforts to streamline and shorten the process for obtaining approvals for the annual shelf of works and to ensure that at least some of the projects listed in the shelf of works have the necessary admin- istrative and technical sanctions. As a result, worksites can be opened promptly in response to demand (MART 2010). 13. Unsurprisingly, in R2 nearly three-quarters of men and women who reported instances of interruption of work at the last worksite at which they worked also felt that BREGS work was not available when they wanted it. 14. The mate is a BREGS worker who is assigned the responsibility of managing the worksite, including taking attendance and overseeing daily operations. 15. The muster roll is a record maintained at the worksite of the daily attendance of workers and payments made for the period of a week or fortnight. 16. Chapter 4 also reports information on wage payment delays, but based on responses averaged across all worksites that the household mem- bers worked on in the year preceding the survey. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 249 17. The rates are intended to be such that an able-bodied worker can produce the output that could earn him or her the stipulated scheme wage. 18. See Drèze and Khera (2009) for a discussion of the downsides of reliance on post office and bank accounts. 19. Studies from other states note that women may not have access to their earnings if the bank account is opened in the name of the male house- hold head. In Andhra Pradesh, household accounts are opened in the name of the woman. 20. A study of six northern states speculated that contractors are likely to step in and run worksites when funds are delayed because they can ensure timely payments and keep the work going (Drèze and Khera 2009). 21. See, for example, Ambasta, Shankar, and Shah (2008) for sugges- tions on the appropriate technical and administrative staff strength required to adequately implement the scheme. 22. Information from the Rural Development Department, government of Bihar, as of December 2011. 23. Total scheme expenditures in 2009/10 were Rs 26,320 million (Rural Development Department, Government of Bihar); there are 8,463 GPs in Bihar. 24. In theory, these, in turn, are derived from the labor budgets put forward by GPs as developed during the bottom-up planning exercise. 25. These data were made available by the Rural Development Department, government of Bihar, and compiled from letters from districts to the Ministry of Rural Development for fund releases and data on receipt of funds from the Central Plan Scheme Monitoring System. The data are somewhat patchy. For the first tranche, we have information on the dates of the requests and the amounts requested and received for all 38 districts, but we have information on the dates of the receipt of funds for only 25 districts. Comparable information across tranches restricts us to 19 districts. 26. One lakh equals Rs 100,000. Analysis of road construction work- sites in two GPs in Kishanganj district indicated that it took about a month for the block to receive funds from the district and a further four or five months to release these funds to the GPs. However, it is possible that this delayed transfer to the GP was not due to bottlenecks in the funds flow but deliberate because the worksites could be opened only after the rainy season was over (Development Alternatives 2009; Sunai 2009). 27. Bihar is one of the forerunners in the implementation of the Right to Information Act in India and in enacting the Right to Public Services Act in 2011. Under the Right to Public Services Act, citizens are entitled to stan- dards in public service delivery, and civil servants are held personally accountable in the event of failure to comply with these standards. This pro- vides another channel for ensuring improved service delivery, although BREGS does not yet come under the ambit of this act. 250 RIGHT TO WORK? 28. See National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations (2009) for an assessment of how such integrated end-to-end IT systems can contribute to improved MGNREGS outcomes. References Ambasta, Prathamesh, P. S. Vijay Shankar, and Mihir Shah. 2008. “Two Years of NREGA: The Road Ahead.” Economic and Political Weekly 43 (8): 41–50. Comptroller and Auditor General. 2008. “Performance Audit of Implementation of National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA).” Report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India. Development Alternatives. 2009. “Report on Scoping Study for Design and Development of Alternative Implementation Model(s) on NREGS.” Background note prepared for the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme study. Development Alternatives, Inc., Washington, DC. Drèze, Jean, and Reetika Khera. 2009. “The Battle for Employment Guarantee.” Frontline 26 (1). Indian Grameen Services. 2009. “Exploring Shelf of Works for Flood Affected Area of North Bihar.” Report prepared for the Rural Development Department, government of Bihar and the World Bank. Indian Grameen Services, Kolkata, India. Mansuri, Ghazala, and Vijayendra Rao. 2013. Localizing Development: Does Participation Work? Washington, DC: World Bank. MART. 2010. “The Synthesis Report: Institutional Review of MGNREGS in Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.” Background note prepared for the BREGS study. NOIDA, India. Ministry of Rural Development. 2011. “Reforms in MGNREGA Implementation.” Government of India, New Delhi. Available online at http://nrega.nic.in/circular/Reforms_in_MGNREGA01092011.pdf. ———. 2013. “Report of the Committee for Revision of MGNREGA Operational Guidelines.” Government of India, New Delhi. Available online at http://nrega.nic.in/circular/Report_Committee_Revision _guidelines.pdf. National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations. 2009. “NREGA Reforms: Building Rural India—First Annual Report of the National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations on NREGA, 2008–09.” National Consortium on NREGA, Madyha Pradesh, India. ———. 2010. “NREGA Reforms: Building Rural India—Second Annual Report of the National Consortium of Civil Society Organizations on NREGA.” National Consortium on NREGA, Madhya Pradesh, India. REFORMING BREGS: ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES 251 PRIA (Society for Participatory Research in Asia). 2007. “Role of Panchayati Raj Institutions in Implementation of NREGA, National Study Phase II.” Society for Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA), New Delhi. Ravallion, Martin. 1999. “Appraising Workfare.” World Bank Research Observer 14: 31–48. Sunai Consultancy Pvt. Ltd. 2009. “Process Qualitative Observation Report, Feb–Mar 2009, Four Blocks of Muzaffarpur and Saharsa Districts of Bihar.” Background note prepared for the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme study. Sunai Consultancy, Bihar, India. World Bank. 2011. Social Protection for a Changing India. Human Development Unit, South Asia. Washington, DC: World Bank. Glossary Block The administrative level above the Gram Panchayat and below the district. Block development A civil servant responsible for the officer (BDO) administration of a block. Block program officer Hired on contract by the state government for (PO) overseeing and monitoring the Bihar Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) implementation in the block. BPL ration card The “Below Poverty Line” card that defines the poverty status of rural households and determines entitlements to various government programs. District The administrative level above the block and below the state. Gram Panchayat (GP) A cluster of villages; the lowest unit of administration. Also used to refer to the elected body at the panchayat level. Gram Sabha A meeting that includes all the adult citizen residents of the village. The Gram Sabha elects representatives to the GP. Kutcha Crude or temporary structure (usually used to describe housing or road quality). Mahadalit In Bihar, Mahadalits, comprising the poorest and most disadvantaged among Scheduled Castes, have been notified as a separate sub- category by the state government. Mate A BREGS worker who is assigned the responsibility of managing the worksite, including taking attendance and overseeing daily operations. 253 254 GLOSSARY Mukhiya The elected leader of the Gram Panchayat, responsible for the implementation of development programs at the panchayat level. Muster roll A record maintained at the BREGS worksites of the daily attendance of workers and payments made for the period of a week or fortnight. Panchayat bhawan A building where the GP conducts its official work. Panchayati Raj The group of locally elected bodies in the Institutions (PRIs) three-tier (GP, block, and district) system of local government. Panchayat rozgar Hired on contract by the state government for sewak implementing the scheme at the GP level. Pucca A solid, permanent, or proper structure (usually in the context of the roof or walls of a house, or a road). Sarpanch The elected leader of the panchayat judiciary body. Schedule of Rates The payment rates for various tasks, intended to be such that an able-bodied worker can produce the output that could earn him or her the stipulated daily MGNREGS wage. Shelf of works Annual list of MGNREGS projects for each GP. Ward A division of a GP, which has representation in the GP elective body. Ward member The representative of the ward in the Gram Panchayat. Index This is a subject index only. Boxes, figures, notes, and tables are indicated by b, f, n, and t following the page numbers. A land surveys in, 224b accountability, 2, 4b, 5, 242, 246 partnering with civil society administrative capacity, need to organizations in, 247 develop, 16–17 Schedule of Rates in, 216n4 administrative issues, 16–17, selection, training, and 219–51 performance management of decentralized administration in mates in, 246 states other than Bihar, 245 social audits in, 247 delays in starting work, 227–28 standardization of projects estimating demand for work, in, 224b 225–26 streamlining system for planning for work, 220–25, approvals in, 248n12 222t, 224–25b targeting in, 59n7 wage payments, 230–34, 231t, transactions-based IT system in, 233t. See also wages 244, 247 worksite management, 228–30, women’s access to bank 228t, 230f. See also worksite accounts in, 249n19 management work estimation model in, advance payment of wages, 115, 225b, 245 117, 234, 246 Argentina’s Trabajar Andhra Pradesh program, 245 audits of MGNREGS awareness intervention, xxv, 15, works in, 7 17, 194–214. See also public community involvement in awareness of BREGS planning process in, 245 electronic funds management B system in, 246 Backward Regions Grant Fund, fixed labor groups on worksites 223, 248n10 in, 245–46 bank accounts household characteristics of rural Bihar’s access to, 232–33, participants in, 87 233t labor demand assessments women’s access to, 249n19 in, 226 ban on contractors, 228–29, 228t 255 256 INDEX Below-Poverty-Line (BPL) ration forgone employment and income cards, 59n7, 84, 86, 95–96, 102, of participants. See forgone 113n10, 166–67, 179, 183, 193, employment and income 216n3, 219 irrigation projects, 222t, Bihar 223, 225 compared to other states, 32, 35, job cards and registration, 71, 39, 245–47 175–79 correlation of poverty rate and methodology MGNREGS participation rate, calculation of weights, 75 32, 35f sampling and sample sizes, 64, demand for work in, 35, 39, 40. 65t, 72–75, 74–76t See also demand for work migration impacts, 153–54, 153t demographics of, 7–8, 223 participation rate. See flood-prone area of, 8, 63, participation in work scheme 248n8 performance in meeting demand inability to absorb available for work, 66–71 resources, 240–41, 241f demand rate, 67, 67t MGNREGS in, 8. See also Bihar gender differences, 68, 77n6 Rural Employment Guarantee household perceptions, 69–71, Scheme (BREGS) 70t participation rate in, 40. See also job cards, lack of, 71, 175–79, participation in work scheme 176t, 177b partnering with civil society participation rate, 67–68, organizations in, 226 67–68t rationing in, 14, 32, 39, 84. rationing rate, 67–68, 67t, 69, See also rationing 70t, 71 for women, 55 poverty impacts, 157–74. unmet demand for work in, See also poverty reduction 35–36, 63–77. See also unmet rationing rate. See rationing demand for work reasons for failure to realize full Bihar Public Grievance Redress potential, 12, 15, 18n8 System, 244 reforms proposed. See reforms Bihar Rural Development proposed Society, 235 road construction projects, 221, Bihar Rural Employment 222t, 249n26 Guarantee Scheme (BREGS) selection of projects, 220–21, compared to other Indian states, 221f, 248n7 245–47 summary statistics, 10–11t compared to previous surveys, 13, 63–66, 71–76 programs, 9 block surveys, 65 demand rate, 85t compared to NSS, 66, 82 description of processes Gram Panchayat surveys, 64 employed in, 8–11, 9f household surveys, 64 effectiveness in reducing poverty, individual surveys, 64 12, 15–16, 219. See also unmet demand for work, poverty reduction 63–77. See also unmet flood control projects, 222t, 223, demand for work 227, 248n8 village surveys, 64 INDEX 257 wages. See wages counterfactual outcomes, xiv, xxiv, water conservation projects, 13–14, 19n19, 147–48, 150, 158. 222t, 223, 225 See also forgone employment and BPL cards. See Below-Poverty-Line income (BPL) ration cards Brazil’s public awareness of D poverty programs, 18n7 days of employment, 98–112, BREGS. See Bihar Rural 99–101t Employment Guarantee Scheme decentralized administration in (BREGS) states other than Bihar, 245 bribery. See corruption delays brokers’ role, 25, 28 in appointing contract staff, 235 in funds transfers, 238–39, C 238t cash payments. See wages in payment of wages, 115, 117, cash transfer program, 219, 118f, 230–34, 231t 248n9 in starting work, 227–28 caste, 47–8, 51, 58, 63, 97, 176, demand for work. See also unmet 184, 191, 194, 207, 213, 236. See demand for work also Scheduled Caste consumption levels and, casual manual labor, 14, 51, 52t, 82–84, 83t 55–56, 61n25, 150, 151t, 154n3. estimating, 225–26 See also wages expressing, 175–79 Chhattisgarh lack of information about, 13, 16 caste targeting in, 48 lack of self-efficacy in MGNREGS participation rates expressing, 12 compared to Bihar, 32, 35, 39 performance of employment partnering with civil society guarantee in meeting, 30–40 organizations in, 247 demand, defined, 32 public spending compared to demand rate, 32–35, 33–34t, Bihar, 35, 39 37f child care provision, 183 female share, 33–34t China’s Di Bao program, 44, 45 participation rate, 32, 33–34t churning, 15, 68–69, 82 program expenditure across citizen awareness. See public states, 32, 36t, 39 awareness of BREGS rationing rate, 32–35, 33–34t, civil society organizations (CSOs), 36–38, 38f 184, 191, 192, 226, 246–47 shortcomings in Colombia’s public works measurement, 31 programs, 245 in poorer states, 35–36, 37f, 39, community involvement in 56, 59n5 planning process, 223–25, registration and expressing 224–25b, 245 demand, 175–79. See also contractors at BREGS worksites, public awareness of BREGS 115, 117, 118, 178–79, 183, 198, unique aspect of MGNREGS, 6 207, 228–29, 228t displacement of other employment corruption, 26–28, 29–30b, opportunities. See forgone 115, 229 employment and income 258 INDEX E forgone employment and income, electoral politics, 24, 25–26 147–55 elite capture, 12, 220 BREGS’s effect, 150–53, 152f employment guarantee, 23–62 forgone income, 149–50, 151t, corruption and, 28–30, 29–30b 158, 161, 162–63f costs of, 24–26, 27–28b forgone opportunities, 148–49, electoral politics and, 24, 25–26 149t performance in meeting demand migration impacts, 153–54, for work, 30–40 153t demand, defined, 32 demand rate, 32–35, G 33–34t, 37f gender differences. See also women female share, 33–34t awareness of BREGS participation rate, 32, 33–34t, registration, xxv, 180–82t, 56, 57–58 183–84, 185–90t, 192–94, program expenditure across 198–99 states, 32, 36t, 39 forgone work opportunities, rationing rate, 32–35, 33–34t, 149, 149t, 150 36–38, 38f participation by women, 9, shortcomings in 53–56, 54–56f, 57t, 60nn20–23 measurement, 31 in poorer states, 53, 55f targeting, 40–48 rationing and, 16 comparison across states, ghost workers, 29b, 115, 135, 44–46, 46t, 58 136, 247 early capture by the GIS resource mapping, 225b, 245 nonpoor, 47 government expenditures on increased participation rate, MGNREGS, 32, 36t, 39, 237–38, effect of, 47, 47f 238t MGNREGS coverage for all Gram Panchayats (GPs), role of, 5, India and Bihar, 41, 42t 8, 18n5, 18nn9–10 per person participation and effect of GP attributes on rationing, 41–44, 43f participation by asset group, rationing rate for the poor, 44 107t by social groups (castes and selection of projects and, 220, tribes), 47–48, 49–50t, 51f, 224b 57, 58 supplying work, constraints targeting differential (TD), on, 227 44–46, 113n4 surveys, 64 unmet demand and, 24–30, village characteristics and, 97 29–30b Gram Sabhas (GS), role of, 7, 8, wages and, 48–53 18n9, 19n15, 220, 247n2 evaluation, 13, 147–8, 196, 242 grievance redress mechanisms, 244 F guarantee of employment. See financial management, 237–42, employment guarantee 238t, 241f, 246. See also wages Gujarat, GIS planning tools in, flow of funds, 238 225b, 245 INDEX 259 H K Hindus, 94, 184, 191 Karnataka’s approach to planning household consumption process, 245 participation in work scheme, Kerala’s approach to planning 82, 83t process, 245 as welfare indicator, 14 knowledge of BREGS. See public awareness of BREGS I impact evaluation, See evaluation L income landholdings forgone. See forgone BREGS project selection employment and income and individual lands, 223, wages. See wages 224b, 225 India households with, 59n7, 184 antipoverty public employment leakage’s effect, 12, 16, 26, program, 1–2. See also 135–36, 166, 173n4, 234 Mahatma Gandhi National lessons learned Rural Employment Guarantee from BREGS study, 15–17 Scheme (MGNREGS) from similar public works economic development, 8 programs in other countries public awareness of poverty and other Indian states, 245–47 programs in, 18n7 local governments, 25–26. See also Public Distribution System Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) (PDS), leakage from, 136 “lost impact,” xxv–xxvi, 157, Indira Awaas Yojana (cash transfer 164, 166 program), 248n9 Information and Public Grievance M Cell, 244 machinery on worksites, 228t, 229 Information campaign, xvii, Madhya Pradesh 17–18, 18n8, 65, 179, 194–214. advance funds availability See also pilot information in, 246 campaign lighter work for elderly and disabled workers in, 216n4 J MGNREGS participation rates Jharkhand compared to Bihar, 32, 39 MGNREGS participation rates partnering with civil society in, 39 organizations in, 247 partnering with civil society standardization of projects in, organizations in, 247 224b job applicants. See Bihar Rural streamlining system for Employment Guarantee approvals in, 248n12 Scheme (BREGS); Mahatma work estimation model in, Gandhi National Rural 225b, 245 Employment Guarantee Scheme Mahadalits, 82, 84, 94, 184, 194 (MGNREGS) Maharashtra Employment job cards and registration, 71, Guarantee Scheme (MEGS), 4, 175–79, 176t, 177b 24, 61n24 260 INDEX Mahatma Gandhi National Rural household consumption as Employment Guarantee Scheme welfare indicator, 14 (MGNREGS) migration impacts, 153–54, 153t background, xiii, 2 minimum wages, 5, 60n13, 115, costs of, 14, 24–26, 27–28b, 144n10 234 Minimum Wages Act, 4b, 48 demand for work. See demand Ministry of Rural Development, for work release of MGNREGS funds, distinguished from earlier public 238–39 works programs, 2–5 monitoring, 7, 25, 242–44. See employment guarantee. See also social audits employment guarantee in other countries, 245 implementation of, xxiii, 2 in other Indian states, 246–47 key features, 3–4b Mukhiyas (leaders of GP), 5, 95, Management Information 96, 113n9 System (MIS), 243–44 closeness to, gender differences no correlation between in, 193 participation rates and demand for work and, 179, 184 incidence of poverty, 35f description of BREGS role of, participation rates, xxiv. 236–37b See also participation in work gender of, 144n2 scheme as money lenders, 117 summary statistics, 33–34t responsible for annual work targeting performance of. See project planning, 220 targeting wages and, 116, 117, 234 types of projects eligible, 221. See also selection of projects N unmet demand for work, 14. National Rural Employment See also unmet demand for Guarantee Act (NREGA 2005) work BPL card not required by, 95 wages. See wages effectiveness of, 23, 69 Management Information System minimum wage rate (MIS), 243–44, 247 stipulated, 115 mates monitoring provisions, 242 defined, 248n14 participatory planning in spirit selection, training, and of, 224 performance management of, passage of, 2 237b, 246 public awareness of rights worksite presence of, 229 from, 175 Mazdoor Kisan Shakti right to work, creation of, Sangathan, 246 xxiii, 2 methodology of study, xiii–xiv, worksite facitilies mandated, xxiv, 13–14, 19n19 229–30, 230f counterfactual outcomes, use National Rural Livelihood of, xiv, xxiv, 13–14, 19n19, Mission, 226 147–48, 150, 158. See also National Sample Survey (NSS) forgone employment and compared to BREGS survey, income 66, 82 INDEX 261 for demand for work and days of employment, 98–112, rationing rates, 31, 216n1 99–101t for India (generally), 13, 14 household characteristics, for wages, 5 87–96, 88–89f, 90–93t for women, 54 individual participation, natural disasters, effect on public demand, and rationing, 98 knowledge of BREGS, 191 Panchayat and village natural resources development, characteristics, 96–98 221, 222t, 223, 225 GP attributes, effect on Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangathan participation by asset group, (youth clubs), 226 107t nongovernmental organizations. by household asset group, See civil society organizations 103–6t (CSOs) individual-level participation, NREGAsoft, 243 108t NREGA Village Vigilance structural model of, 59n6 Committee (NVVC), 191, 242 targeting, 82–86. See also targeting O village infrastructure and, 96–98 opportunity costs, 12, 19n20 payment of wages. See wages Pearlin Mastery scale, 114n14, P 184, 193, 194, 216n6 Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) performance gap, xxv administrative costs and, 24–25 pilot information campaign, in Bihar, 7 194–214 capacity building of, 236 planning for work, 220–25, 222t, constitutional authority of, 18n5 224–25b financial management role, 238 post office accounts, 232–33, 233t MGNREGS role of, 5 poverty reduction shortcomings of, 224b BREGS’s impact on, xxv–xxvi, Panchayat rozgar sewaks (PRSs) 6, 12, 147, 157–74, 173n2, 219 demand for work and, 179 comparisons with other document collection and simulated impacts, 161–68, recordkeeping by, 243 165f, 167t project selection and, 223 correlation of participation road construction and, 221 rates, 32, 35f wage payment issues and, demand effect, 39 116–17, 232, 234 extra earnings from BREGS, worksite management and, 228 157–61, 159–60f, 162f participation in work scheme, forgone income and, 158, 161, 79–114. See also rationing 162–63f characteristics of participants, perceptions of, 168–73, 79–82, 80–81t 169–72t consumption levels and, 82, 83t “lost impact,” xxv–xxvi, 157, determinants of, 86–112 164, 166 assignment of work, 86, MGNREGS’s approach to, 108–12t, 128 1–2, 5–6. See also Mahatma BPL ration cardholders, 95–96 Gandhi National Rural 262 INDEX Employment Guarantee Scheme selection, training, and (MGNREGS) performance management of persistence of poverty, 1 mates in, 246 PRIs. See Panchayati Raj streamlining system for Institutions approvals in, 248n12 pro-poor nature of scheme, xxiv, transparency safeguards in, 40, 59n7, 84. See also Scheduled 246–47 Caste and Scheduled Tribe rationing, 48–53 (SC/ST) workers; targeting administrative capacity PRSs. See Panchayat rozgar improvements to reduce, 17 sewaks days of employment, 98–112, public awareness of BREGS, 6–7, 99–101t 15, 16, 175–217, 214–15t determinants of, 86–112 gender differences, 180–82t, gender aspect of, 16 183–84, 185–90t, 192–94, MEGS and, 24 198–99, 200–203t, 214–15t MGNREGS and, 23, 31–40 methods used in other countries, in poorer states, 14, 32, 18n7 35–36, 57 natural disasters, effect on, 191 rationing effect, 39 pilot information campaign, reasons for, 6, 14 194–213 relationship between film used to convey MGNREGS participation rate information, 195–96, 213 and demand for MGNREGS gender difference in reaction, work, 38f 198–99, 200–203t, 214–15t undermining poverty impact of showing film, reduction, 58 196–212, 197t, 205–6t, women and, 55–56, 56f 208–12t reforms proposed, xxvi registration and expressing administrative processes, 16–17, demand, 175–79, 176t, 177b 219–51 rural household knowledge, delays in starting work, 179–94, 180–82t, 185–90t 227–28 success of forming work groups, estimating demand for work, information on, 246 225–26 Public Distribution System (PDS), planning for work, 220–25, leakage from, 136 222t, 224–25b public works, xxiii, 2, 4, 8, 55, 66, wage payments, 230–34, 231t, 73, 96, 119, 120–2 233t pucca vs. kutcha worksite management, roads, 221 228–30, 228t, 230f roofs, 113n1 awareness of BREGS, 17, 194–214. See also public R awareness of BREGS Rajasthan supply-side issues, 219, 234–44 fixed labor groups on worksites centralized fund in, 246 management, 242 MGNREGS participation rates delays in release of funds, compared to Bihar, 32, 39 238–39, 238t INDEX 263 grievance redress skilled workers mechanisms, 244 importance in managing inability of Bihar to absorb MGNREGS, 24–25 available resources, 240–41, shortage of, xxiv, 224b, 235, 245 241f social audits, 7, 242, 247 monitoring, 242–44 spillover effect of public works shortfall in funds received, programs, 5–6, 13 239–40 State Employment Guarantee staffing and capacity, 234–37 Fund, 241 registration. See demand for strikes by workers, 228 work; public awareness of supply-side issues, xxvi, 15, 219, BREGS 234–44 Right to Information Act, 249n27 financial management, 237–42, Right to Public Services Act, 238t, 241f. See also wages 249n27 grievance redress mechanisms, right to work, xxiii, 2, 178–79 244 road construction in Bihar, 221, monitoring, 7, 242–44 222t, 227, 249n26 planning process, 226–28 rolling fund for wage staffing and capacity, 234–37 payments, 241 survey data, 13, 15–16, 31–32, 41, rural nature of MGNREGS, 4 55, 63–76 S T Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Tamil Nadu’s approach to Yojana, 223 monitoring, 247 Scheduled Caste and Scheduled targeting, 40–48, 82–86 Tribe (SC/ST) workers. See also comparison across states, 44–46, Mahadalits 46t, 58, 59n7 awareness of BREGS early capture by the registration, 184 nonpoor, 47 participation of, 9, 82, 84, 94, increased participation rate, 109t, 113n2 effect of, 47, 47f selection of BREGS projects MGNREGS coverage for all and, 223 India and Bihar, 41, 42t special treatment due to per person participation and constitutional recognition of, rationing, 41–44, 43f 19n16 by poverty status, 86t targeting by, 47–48, 49–50t, rationing rate for the poor, 44 57, 58 by social groups (castes and seasonality tribes), 47–48, 49–50t, 51f, 57, demand for work and, 226 58, 86t effect in PW wages, 122–24, 124f targeting differential (TD), selection of projects, 12, 220–21, 44–46, 60n11, 113n4 221f, 223, 248n7 wage rate increase and, 59n1 self-targeting, xxiii, 5, 40, 45, 56, women, 47–48, 49–50t 79, 168 technical staff, 235, 243 SHGs. See women, self-help training groups of mates, 237b, 246 264 INDEX of scheme staff and PRI someone else’s farm, 129, representatives, 237 130t transparency, 2, 5, 177b, 242, 246 comparing actual net income with stipulated wages for the U scheme, 115 Uganda, public awareness of comparing public works (PW) poverty programs in, 18n7 and non-PW wages, 119, unemployment allowance, 216n2 121–22f, 123t United States, antipoverty for BREGS participants and programs in, 18n7 excess demanders, 125–28, unmet demand for work, 12, 126–27f 14–15, 63–77 gender differences, 119, 129, BREGS survey, 63–66 132–33, 133f, 135 employment guarantee and, 23, seasonality effect in PW 24–30 wages, 122–24, 124f corruption and, 28–30, wage floor for PW labor in 29–30b BREGS, 129–33, 131–32f “lost impact” due to, 164 comparing survey-based need to strengthen administrative estimates with administrative capacity for, 16 records, 15, 16, 135–36, 137t performance in meeting, 14, corruption and, 115, 135 31–32, 66–72 determinants of, 133–35, in poorer states, 35–36, 37f, 138–43t 39, 44 employment guarantee and, priority to address, 58 48–53, 58 wages and, 128 exploitation of rural workers, 115, 118 V forgone income, 115, 149–50. Vigilance Committees, 191, 242 See also forgone employment Village Disaster Management and income Plan, 223 gender differences, 119 village infrastructure, 96–98. See household wages, 118–28 also road construction in Bihar; impact of BREGS on, 122, selection of projects 128–33 planning process, 220–25 leakage’s effect on, 12, 16, 26, 135–36, 166, 173n4, 234 W minimum wage rate, 5, 48, wages, 115–45 60n13, 115, 144n10 average wage rates, 48, 52t, monopsony power of local 60n15 employers over, 115, 134 casual labor, 51, 52t, 119, 120t, National Sample Survey (NSS) 125t, 126–27f on, 124–25, 125t difference in BREGS and payment, 116–18 non-BREGS wages at advance payment, 115, 117, individual level, 134–35, 234, 246 138–43t in cash, 5, 117, 233–34 substitution days between delays, 115, 117, 118f, work on own farm and 230–34, 231t INDEX 265 measurement of productivity demand for work and awareness for, 116, 232 of rights, 178–79, 178f methods of, 116–17, 232–33, information campaigns 233t emphasizing equal gender piece-rate basis, 116, 128, potential, 179 133, 135 participation by, 9, 53–56, rolling fund established to 54–56f, 57t, 60nn20–23 reduce delays, 241 self-help groups (SHGs), 184, Schedule of Rates (SoR) in 191, 192 Bihar, 116, 135, 231 targeting of, 47–48, 49–50t streamlining flow of funds and wages in casual labor market, disbursements, 246 119, 144n11 time-rate basis, 116, 135 workfare programs. See Bihar public works wages, 119–28, Rural Employment Guarantee 131, 135, 152 Scheme (BREGS); Mahatma reservation wage, 5 Gandhi National Rural water conservation projects, 222t, Employment Guarantee Scheme 223, 225 (MGNREGS) West Bengal worksite facilities mandated, MGNREGS participation 229–30, 230f rates compared to Bihar, worksite management, 228–30, 32, 39 228t. See also contractors at partnering with civil society BREGS worksites organizations in, 247 fixed labor groups’ role, women. See also gender 246–47 differences in states other than Bihar, bank accounts, access to, 245–46, 248n12 249n19 work stoppage, 228 contractors on sites and harassment of women, 229 Y delay in receiving wages, 117 youth clubs, 226 ECO-AUDIT Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank is committed to pre- Saved: serving endangered forests and natural • 11 trees resources. 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