Shivraj Chouhan raises MGNREGA work days to 125, pushes last-mile delivery
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Rural Development Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Sunday, 28 June directed senior officials to ensure that the annual allocation of more than ₹1.5 lakh per beneficiary under the Viksit Bharat – GRAM-G and MGNREGA schemes flows directly to panchayats and is deployed effectively for village-level development. The directive came at the inauguration of the two-day National Rural Development Conference in New Delhi.
Key Announcements at the Conference
Chouhan confirmed that the number of guaranteed work days under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) has been raised from 100 to 125 days per year. He underscored that the government's resolve is that no eligible labourer should be left without employment. Addressing officers, he invoked Prime Minister Narendra Modi's guiding principle: 'the government should not be seen only in files but in the lives of the people.'
He stressed that scheme formulation alone is insufficient — delivery without bribery, without procedural delay, and without exclusion of deserving beneficiaries is the true measure of governance.
Women's Empowerment and Rural Livelihoods
The minister highlighted significant progress under the National Rural Livelihoods Mission (NRLM), noting that crores of women have increased their incomes by joining Self-Help Groups (SHGs), and that lakhs of Lakhpati Didis — rural women earning over ₹1 lakh annually — have already emerged. The government's target is to scale this to 6 crore Lakhpati Didis.
Chouhan called for moving rural women beyond traditional cottage industries such as papad and pickle-making into food processing, agri-business, the service sector, and digital platforms, arguing that only this broader integration can make rural entrepreneurship the true backbone of Viksit Bharat.
Twelve Years of Rural Infrastructure: What the Data Shows
Ministry of Rural Development Secretary Rohit Kansal presented a sweeping account of departmental achievements over the past 12 years: nearly 8 lakh kilometres of rural roads constructed, 3 crore pucca houses built, 3 crore Lakhpati Didis created, and 10 crore rural women linked to SHGs.
Kansal cautioned, however, that the department now stands at a critical inflection point. Collective thinking is needed for the next decade on asset maintenance, scheme saturation, and further improving the Ease of Living for rural citizens — signalling a shift in focus from construction to consolidation.
Conference Structure and What Comes Next
The inaugural day was structured around scheme implementation reviews, state-wise progress assessments, best-practice presentations, and sessions on technology and AI adoption in rural delivery. Dedicated halls covered Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (Gramin), Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY), and the National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP), among others.
On the second and final day, Rural Development Ministers from all states and union territories are set to join plenary sessions, bringing political leadership into deliberations that so far have been driven by bureaucratic review. The conference's outcomes are expected to shape implementation priorities for rural schemes in the coming financial year.