By A Representative In an open statement marking the 20th anniversary of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), the Constitutional Conduct Group (CCG), comprising 88 former civil servants from the All-India and Central Services, has expressed "deep anguish" over the Union government’s decision to repeal the landmark legislation.
By Aysha* In a press release issued on 10 February, the government described the VB-GRAM G Act, 2025 as more “women-friendly” than MGNREGA. This claim must be examined through the lens of food security. For rural women, an employment guarantee is not a routine welfare measure; it is often the foundation of household survival. The central question is whether the new law genuinely strengthens women’s ability to feed their families or merely expands entitlements on paper. Most of the provisions presented as “women-centric” are not new. The one-third mandatory participation of women already existed under MGNREGA, and in practice women’s participation consistently exceeded 50 percent. This was not symbolic. It demonstrated that MGNREGA functioned as a critical pillar of food security for rural households. When agricultural employment declined or seasonal migration was not feasible, these wages enabled women to purchase grain, pulses, oil and other essentials. The new Act does not clari...