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Replace
‘income support’ programme
with
‘employment generation’ plan
By Dr. Sabur
Ghayur
The
“welfare” and “workfare” programmes are two important instruments
of policy makers outreaching the poor and marginalised segments of the
population in times of distress.
Termed as important components of social safety nets,
it is quite common for governments of poverty stricken regions to recourse
to such programmes at the time of need, for economic development and
improving the lives of the societies’ underprivileged.
A variety of governmental programs designed to protect
citizens from economic risks and insecurities of life have been
experimented in a number of developing countries. Such programs mostly
provide financial assistance to beneficiaries; however, they also contain
certain positive and life changing conditions. Such as, the beneficiaries
of these programmes have to enrol their children in schools etc.
Bangladesh launched a targeted food rationing
programme in 1993. It was later replaced with food for education programme,
which provides a free monthly ration of rice or wheat to poor families if
their children attend primary school. Poor households are provided monthly
15 kg of rice per child with a maximum of 20kg, if all the children of a
family are enrolled in primary schools. The goals of this program are to
increase primary school enrollment, promote attendance, reduce dropout
rates, and enhance the quality of education.
Progresa – a social assistance program in which cash
is transferred to poor households was introduced in Mexico. Federally
designed and implemented cash transfers were conditioned with: (i)
enrolment of children aged 6-17 years in schools, and ii) regular visits
to health centres with full attendance at information sessions.
The workfare programmes (WFPs) have come into
existence in response to the crisis of unemployment and poverty having
cropped up in recent times, due to macro-economic instability or climatic
disasters owing to global warming. Such programmes were introduced in
different regions under different circumstances. For example, South Korea
in response to the Asian financial and economic crisis of 1997-98,
north-east Brazil due to the prolonged drought that destroyed it in 1998,
and in Argentina, where in 1997 unemployment had reached 18 per cent
because of recession.
In our
neighbouring country India, the Maharashtra state was first to guarantee
statutorily to the principle of “right to work”; making employment an
entitlement for everyone to empower the poor living in slums. The
Maharashtra Employment Guarantee Act was enacted in 1979. In 2004, the
then newly elected government launched the national rural guarantee
scheme, initially in 150 districts and then later covering the entire
country.
Successful workfare programmes have been found to be
linked with citizens earning low wages in mostly poor countries of the
world. However, it has been witnessed that when market wages fall,
programme wages are also reduced. Like in the case of Argentina’s
trabajar programme, where low wages were paid to the rural population on
the basis that it was just a form of economic assistance only and not a
hefty remuneration amount. In Korea, the programme wage was set slightly
below the market wage for unskilled labour. The programme in Brazil also
paid benefits below the minimum wage.
Pakistan also has various welfare or social security
programmes aimed for the betterment of the unemployed or poor people. Many
of these programmes announced have found later to be either abandoned or
replaced with others. The “guzara” (sustenance) allowance and
permanent rehabilitation programs under Zakat have been in place for
decades; reaching over a millions of families. In addition to this, cash
transfer, individual financial assistance, food support and vocational
training programmes are reaching over a million needy and destitute
through the Pakistan Baitul-ul-Mal (PBM). Further, there is the wheat
subsidy and the mid-day meal for school students under Tawana Pakistan
programme, however this has been dis-continued. Except the programmes
under Zakat, the rest are funded through budgetary allocations, on many
occasions based on foreign loans.
The People’s Party government launched a rather
ambitious income support programme in August 2008, targeting 3.5 million
households in its initial year of inception. With a huge financial
allocation of Rs.35 billion, the funds for Benazir Income Support
Programme (BISP) have been doubled for the current fiscal year. The
international financial institutions are the major providers of funds, in
the form of loans for this particular programme. While not denying the
need for a well prepared social safety net programme, one is really
astounded by the ease with which such an uneconomic, unsustainable and
ineffective programme has been launched and that too on borrowed money.
A look at the current employment and labour market
situation lands us into a rather discomforting situation. The signs
emanating from the labour market are alarming. The economic side is
exacerbating at a fast rate. Rapid depleting regular employment has become
a norm. The unemployed workforce escalating at a swift pace is being
confronted with absorption difficulties. Furthermore, those employed; a
large proportion of them have to be satisfied with such working
environments having longer hours of work, lesser remunerations with an
overall poor working conditions. Females and the youth are the most
disadvantaged segments of the society as poverty and unemployment are fast
engulfing them, even though many of them are educated and skilled.
Unemployment and poverty are fast returning and surging the economy.
Indeed the current situation, besides other
interventions deserves a well designed and implemented workfare programme.
A mechanism of WFP that can provide a guaranteed wage employment for 120
days can be worked out rather easily. The pubic sector development
programmes (PSDPs) do contain huge allocations for a large number of
smaller projects, many of them related to infrastructural development.
These need to be linked with an employment generation programme (EGP)
primarily for the rural areas and slums. The citizens’ community board
is to be consulted, as well as local bodies involved with the national and
provincial parliamentarians in the design and monitoring of the programme,
along with other schemes. The activities that can be undertaken under the
EGP may also include: (i) soil conversation and development, (ii)
developing waste lands, (iii) water conservation, (iv) minor irrigation,
(vi) flood protection, (vii) improving water courses, (viii) brick-lining
of canals, (ix) supply of clean drinking water, (x) electricity, (xi)
building of streets, (xiii) horticulture, (xiv) forestation, and (xv)
roads building and maintenance.
Whereas, diversion of financial resources from the
Benazir income support programme can be the immediate source of funding,
whereas, levy of EGP tax on motor vehicles, all non-food and non-oil
imports and a rise of GST by 0.5 per cent would be the other sources of
funding. Furthermore, the international financial institutions can also
provide financial assistance to meet their goal of poverty reduction.
As far as the much broadcasted BISP is concerned, it
should not be discarded. In fact, it should be amalgamated with the
Pakistan Bait-ul-Maal and Zakat but with significant reforms in the
governance of these institutions.
The introduction of the employment generation
programme, owing to the worsening labour market situation and large
infrastructural gaps especially in rural areas is quite essential for us
and long overdue. It will address the three most critical obstacles faced
by Pakistan’s economy; unemployment, poverty and slow economic growth.
Moreover, it will also be a face saving for the much trumpeted BISP,
providing it a safe exit.
— (The writer heads Islamabad-based centre for
labour advocacy and dialogue (CLAD).)
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