In its
capacity as the nodal Ministry, the Ministry of Women and Child Development
seeks to promote economic empowerment of women through policies and programmes
cutting across sectors, mainstreaming gender concerns, creating awareness about
their rights and facilitating institutional and legislative support for
enabling them to develop to their full potential. The important programmes in different areas
are
Skill upgradation:
Support to
Training & Employment Programme for Women (STEP), a Central Sector Scheme launched in 1986-87, seeks to upgrade
skill of poor and assetless women and provide
employment on sustainable basis by mobilizing them in viable cooperative
groups, strengthening marketing linkages, support services and access to credit. The scheme also provides for enabling
support services in the form of health check-ups, legal and health literacy,
elementary education, gender sensitization and mobile crèches. The ultimate
endeavour of each project is to develop the group to thrive on a
self-sustaining basis in the market place with minimal governmental support and
intervention even after the project period is over. Since inception, around 250 projects have
been provided financial assistance under the scheme.
The ten traditional sectors identified
for project funding under STEP comprise of agriculture, animal husbandry,
dairying, fisheries, handlooms, handicrafts, khadi
and village industries, sericulture, waste land development and social
forestry. The scope and coverage of the scheme is being broadened with
introduction of locally appropriate sectors being identified and incorporated
into the scheme.
Rajiv Gandhi
Scheme for Empowerment of Adolescent Girls (RGSEAG) – ‘Sabla’, a
Centrally-sponsored scheme was approved by the Government on 16.8.2010. The
scheme is being implemented in 200 districts across the country on a pilot
basis. In the remaining districts, Kishori Shakti Yojana (KSY) continues to
be operational as before. However, SABLA
has completely replaced Nutrition Programme for Adolescent Girls (NPAG) as all
districts of NPAG are now part of the SABLA. The scheme, interalia,
aims at vocational training for girls above 16 years of age for their economic
empowerment.
Sabla
is being implemented through the State Governments/UTs with 100 per cent
financial assistance from the Central Government for all inputs other than
nutrition provision for which 50 % Central assistance to States is provided.
Anganwadi Centre is the focal point for the delivery of the services.
Objectives:
i.
Life Skill Education and accessing public
services,
ii.
Vocational training for girls aged 16 and
above under National Skill Development Program (NSDP)
iii.
The successful implementation of SABLA
requires convergence with development activities/schemes of other Departments
such as Health, Education, Youth Affairs, Labour, PRIs etc.
iv.
Nearly 100 lakh
adolescent girls per annum are expected to be benefitted under the scheme.
Against the allocation of Rs. 350 crore for the year
2010-11, a sum of Rs. 330 crore (approx.) has been
released to States/UTs. The year 2011-12 will be the first complete year of
implementation of the scheme after which the physical and financial
achievements made vis-à-vis the target would be assessed. A sum of Rs. 750 crore has been allocated for Sabla for 2011-12.
Central
Social Welfare Board (CSWB)- In order to address the
socio-economic needs of the women and children of selected eight most backward
districts in the North Eastern region in the economic arena, Central Social
Welfare Board has formulated the Integrated Scheme for Women Empowerment
(ISWE). The scheme is being implemented on pilot basis since 2008 and has the
objective of meeting the felt needs of the area by mobilizing community action,
converging available services and resources of the area, income generation
through feasible and sustainable activities for women and to provide services
for health awareness, career counseling vocational training, preventing child
trafficking and other social evils.
Economic
Improvement:
National
Mission for Empowerment of Women- The extent of empowerment of
women from a holistic and macro-point of view is largely determined by 3 factors
viz. economic, social and political identity. These factors are deeply
intertwined and linked with many cross cutting linkages. It implies that if
efforts in any one dimension remains absent or week, the outcome and momentum
generated by the other components cannot be sustained. It is only when all
these three factors are addressed simultaneously and made compatible with each
other can women be truly empowered. Therefore, for the holistic empowerment of
women, an inter-sectoral approach has to be adopted. The vision for
socio-economic empowerment of women is to empower women economically and
socially to end exploitation and discrimination enabling them to develop their
full potential to be active participants in nation building, sharing the
benefits of economic growth and prosperity. To achieve this vision, the
National Mission for Empowerment of Women (NMEW) was launched on 8th March. The
objectives of the Mission are to:
I.
Ensure economic empowerment
of women,
II.
Ensure that violence
against women is eliminated progressively,
III.
Ensure empowerment of women
with emphasis on health and education,
IV.
Oversee gender
mainstreaming of programmes, policies, institutional
arrangements and processes of participating Mininstries,
institutions and organizations, and
V.
Undertake awareness
generation as well as advocacy activities to fuel the demand for benefits under
various schemes and progreammes and create, if
required, structures at district, tehsil and village
level with the involvement of Panchayats foe their
fulfillment.
Economic
Empowerment of Women is to be achieved through convergence of the schemes and
programmes having focus on formation and promotion of SHGs so as to enable
women to have access to micro credit and micro finance. Programmes like
National Rural Livelihood Mission (erstwhile SGSY) of MoRD,
Smayamsidha of MWCD and similar programmes of other
Ministries and organizations would need to be converged to help the identified
SHGs in a coordinated fashion. The Mission would see that access to credit by
women SHGs under schemes of NABARD, Rashtriya Mahila Kosh, Financial
institutions like NSCFDC/ NBCFDC/ NSKFDC of MoSJ&E
and nationalized banks, is coordinated well and delivery of credit is timely.
In order to
promote self employment opportunities and create livelihood options for women,
it would ensure that training and skill upgradation
under schemes/ programmes of MoS&ME, MoL&E , MoRD, MWCD etc. are
available to the women beneficiaries of SHGs and that there is no duplication
of errors. Sustainability of income generation activities by women would be
looked at and they would be ensured provision of adequate forward, backward and
horizontal linkages. The relevant programmes of NABARD, RMK and participating
Ministries as well as organizations with components of processing, storage,
distribution and market networks would be put in a convergent mode to
strengthen the livelihood of women.
The existing
monitoring systems in place at the state and district levels would be utilized
by the National Mission for tracking the effectiveness of convergence efforts
in the area of economic empowerment. While at the district level, the District
Collector as per the existing arrangement of the DRDA would be responsible for
monitoring convergence efforts at the district level, the Chief Secretary of
the State Government with technical inputs from the State Resource Centre to be
set up for women (SRCW) will be made responsible at the state level. At the
national level national level, the National Mission Authority (NMA) will be responsible
for overall monitoring of actionable agenda requiring convergence and for which
it will take the inputs from both the Mission Directorate and the National
Resource Centre for Women (NRCW).
Rashtriya Mahila Kosh - (National Credit
Fund for Women)
The Rashtriya Mahila Kosh (National Credit Fund for Women) was set up in 1993
with a corpus of Rs. 31 crore, against the backdrop
of socio-economic constraints faced by poor women to access micro – credit from
the formal financial system in the country, especially those in the rural and
in unorganized sectors. The principal corpus has increased to Rs.100.00 crore by 2009-10.
The main objective of setting up of Rashtriya Mahila Kosh (RMK) under the
Department of Women and Child Development (now Ministry) was to provide
micro-credit to poor women for various livelihood support and income generating
activities at concessional terms in a client-friendly procedure to bring about
their socio-economic development. The RMK is now being restructured as a NBFC
with a corpus of Rs.500.00 crore. Till 31.3.2011, 6, 87,512 women beneficiaries
have been sanctioned Rs.307.52 crore and disbursed
Rs.251.82 crore.
However, with the proposed induction of funds and conversion to NBFC,
the projected yearly number of beneficiaries and loans are at the end of five
year period in FY 2015-16 is likely to be 2,19,500 and Rs.492.02 crore respectively.
Thus, there would be a quantum jump in the business volume of the
organization through this restructuring.
Further, the fact that RMK extends loan upto
maximum of 18 per cent interest per annum to SHGs/beneficiaries as against
loans disbursed to beneficiaries through Micro Finance Institutions (MFIs)
under the NABARD’s SHG - Bank Linkage Programme at the interest rate ranging between 30 and 40
per cent per annum and even higher and 60 to 70 percent rate charged by
traditional moneylenders, would mean that the impact by way of higher incomes
and welfare of the beneficiaries at such
an expanded scale of finance and at affordable rate, would be much more
pronounced.
An RMK sponsored ‘Impact Study ‘ of 2008 shows 84% beneficiaries from
rural areas and 16% from urban areas had undertaken activities like Animal
husbandry (41%), Petty Shops (19%) and Agriculture (17%). Their monthly income has increased between
Rs.2000/- and Rs.4000/-. 54% reported increase in household
expenditure, 96% reported improvement in food consumption pattern, and 87%
reported increase in household assets.
Access to medical facility increased for majority of beneficiaries
(88%). There was increase in social
status of 87% of beneficiaries. 98%
women beneficiaries reported increase in their self-confidence and security
with increased income through RMK.
Majority (95%) of the beneficiaries reported improvement in their
standard of living and participation in micro finance led to decrease in
domestic violence.
Gender
Budgeting and Economic Empowerment of Women-
Budgets, which influence the overall level of
national income and employment and reflect the priorities of the government
regarding public investment, also promote gender equality within the national
development framework. The Government of
India is committed to promoting gender equality and has adopted Gender
Budgeting (GB) as a tool to address the inequalities faced by women. The
purpose is to ensure the translation of Government’s policy commitments on
gender equity into budgetary allocations.
To institutionalize the process of Gender Budgeting, the Government had
initiated the formation of Gender Budget Cells (GBCs) within all Central
Ministries/ Departments in 2005. These Cells are required to take up evaluation
of existing Government programmes and schemes from a gender perspective and
identify new areas of intervention for addressing the existing gender gaps. The
flow of funds under certain women specific schemes/programmes are also being
monitored through a Gender Budget Statement (Statement 20) as a part of the
Union Budget Document since 2005.
MWCD, as the nodal agency, is pursuing with other Ministries/Departments
to build their capacity so as to integrate gender concerns across
sectors/schemes/programmes/ and ensure proper allocation and/or
reprioritization of resources. The
number of Ministries reflecting their allocations in the Gender Budget
Statement have gone up from nine in 2005-06 to 29 in 2011-12, with a magnitude
of Gender Budget (BE) increasing from Rs.14379.00 crore
(2.79%) in 2005-06 to Rs.78251.00 crore (6.22%) in
2011-12.
Support
services:
Hostel for
Working Women-
a. The Scheme of Working Women Hostel envisages provision of safe and affordable hostel
accommodation to working women, single working women, women working at places
away from their home-towns and for women being trained for employment.
The scheme
has been revised with following salient features:
·
Financial assistance for construction of hostel building to be
given only on public land.
·
Financial assistance available for rent of the hostels
which are run in rented premises also.
·
Provision for maintenance grant of hostel building
(maximum Rs.5 lakh) and one-time
non-recurring grant for furnishings (@ Rs.7500 per beneficiary).
·
State Government agencies, Urban Municipal Bodies, Cantonment
Boards, Civil Society Organizations, Panchayati Raj
Institutions, Self Help Groups, Recognized Colleges/Universities, and Corporate
or associations like CII, ASSOCHAM and FICCI have been included under the
revised scheme.
·
The State Governments have
been advised to disseminate and send project proposals as per the revised
guidelines the Scheme. Since its inception in 1972-73, 890 hostels have been
sanctioned under the scheme all over the country benefiting about 66,000
working women.
b. Working
Women Hostel at Jasola, New Delhi: In view of
increasing incidents of assault on women from the North-eastern States, the
Ministry of Women and Child Development had undertaken construction of a
working women hostel in the year 2008-09 exclusively for the working women of
North East region working in and around Delhi. The construction of the hostel
building at Jasola, New Delhi, has been completed in
this current year. The six storied hostel building is having 167 living rooms
with a capacity to accommodate 500 working women. This hostel also has provision
of a day care centre for the children of working mothers.
Rajiv
Gandhi National Creche Scheme-With a view
to encourage women to join/ continue with gainful employment, Rajiv Gandhi
National Creche Scheme for children of working
mothers (RGNCS) was introduced in 2006. The scheme seeks to provide day care
facilities to children in the age group 0-6 years from families with a monthly
income of less than Rs. 12,000/-. In addition to being a safe space for the
children, the crèche provide services like supplementary nutrition, pre school education, emergency health care etc.
The scheme provides for grant of
Rs.3532/- per month for a crèche, limited to 90% of the schematic pattern or
actual expenditure whichever is less, and the remaining expenditure is borne by
the implementing agencies. Honorarium to crèche workers is fully funded under
the scheme. Funds are separately provided to the implementing agencies for one
time training of crèche workers.
The
Central Sector scheme is implemented through Central Social Welfare Board
(CSWB) and two national level mother NGOs i.e. Indian Council for Child Welfare
(ICCW) and Bharatiya Adimjati Sevak Sangh (BAJSS).
Indira Gandhi Matritva Sahyog Yojana (IGMSY) – Conditional Maternity Benefit (CMB) scheme
is a Conditional Cash Transfer scheme for pregnant and lactating
women to contribute to better enabling environment by providing cash incentives
for improved health and nutrition to pregnant and nursing mothers. It is being implemented initially on pilot
basis in 52 selected districts using the platform of ICDS. IGMSY is a Centrally
Sponsored Scheme introduced in the FY 2010-11, under which the grant-in-aid is
released to States/UTs. The Scheme
envisages providing cash directly to P&L women during pregnancy and lactation
in response to individual fulfilling specific conditions. It would address
short term income support objectives with long term objective of behaviour and
attitudinal change. The scheme attempts
to partly compensate for wage loss to pregnant & lactating women both prior
to and after delivery of the child.
YSKataria