Assam launches VB-G RAM-G scheme: 125 days of rural jobs under CM Sarma
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Wednesday, 1 July announced the statewide rollout of the VB-G RAM-G scheme, a rural employment initiative designed to guarantee 125 days of wage work per year while building durable village infrastructure across Assam. The programme was formally launched across all districts on the same day.
What the Scheme Promises
The VB-G RAM-G initiative is structured around two parallel objectives: generating large-scale wage employment for rural households and creating productive community assets. According to the state government, works under the scheme include road construction, land development, drainage improvement, and other labour-intensive public infrastructure projects.
Photographs released by the Chief Minister's Office showed villagers already participating in these works at multiple locations across the state on the day of the launch, signalling an immediate ground-level rollout rather than a phased start.
What CM Sarma Said
Sharing the development on social media, Chief Minister Sarma said the programme had officially commenced statewide. “With VB-G RAM-G now underway, our villages are set to benefit from greater employment and stronger livelihoods,” he said. He expressed confidence that the initiative would provide a meaningful income boost to rural families while accelerating village-level development.
How It Fits Assam’s Rural Development Push
The scheme is part of a broader strategy by the Assam government to accelerate rural economic growth through targeted interventions. In recent years, the state has rolled out several welfare and livelihood programmes focused on women, farmers, and economically weaker sections in villages. Officials said implementation of VB-G RAM-G will be closely monitored to ensure timely project execution and effective fund utilisation.
Notably, by guaranteeing a fixed 125-day employment window, the scheme mirrors the structural logic of central employment guarantee frameworks while allowing the state to direct works toward locally identified infrastructure gaps.
Expected Impact
The government expects the programme to deliver a dual dividend: supplementary income for rural households in the short term, and improved village infrastructure that supports longer-term economic activity. Officials said the scheme also aims to deepen community participation in developmental works, making villages co-stakeholders in their own infrastructure upgrades.
With the rollout now underway, the state’s ability to sustain momentum, disburse wages on time, and verify asset creation will determine whether VB-G RAM-G translates its design intent into measurable rural gains.