Syllabus: GS2/Government Policy & Intervention
Context
- The Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana–National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY NRLM) is transitioning into a new phase, often referred to as NRLM 2.0, and prepares for the next five-year cycle (2026–27 to 2030–31).
About DAY NRLM
- It is a flagship poverty alleviation and women empowerment programme, launched in 2011 by the Union Ministry of Rural Development.
- It aims to reduce rural poverty by enabling poor households, especially women to access sustainable livelihoods through strong, community-based institutions.
Core Objective of DAY NRLM
- The central goal of DAY NRLM is to organise rural poor women into Self-Help Groups (SHGs) and build their capacities so they can:
- access affordable credit;
- start and expand livelihood activities;
- improve incomes and social status;
- participate actively in local governance and decision-making.
Institutional Structure
- Self-Help Groups (SHGs): Small groups (10–20 women) that promote savings, internal lending, and collective action.
- Village Organisations (VOs): Federations of SHGs at the village level that coordinate activities, resolve issues, and implement schemes.
- Cluster-Level Federations (CLFs): Sub-block level, formally registered bodies that anchor livelihoods, financial services, social action, and convergence with government programmes.
Scale and Reach of DAY NRLM
- DAY NRLM has mobilised nearly 10 crore rural households into about 91 lakh Self-Help Groups (SHGs), federated further into 5.35 lakh Village Organisations (VOs) and 33,558 Cluster-Level Federations (CLFs).
- These SHGs have leveraged over ₹11 lakh crore in bank credit, maintaining an impressively low NPA of around 1.7%.
- The impact on incomes is equally striking, with the number of ‘Lakhpati Didis’, women earning over ₹1 lakh annually crossing two crore.
Key Interventions: Why Does DAY NRLM Matter?
- Political and Social Empowerment: Several States are now routing unattached Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) schemes directly to women, such as Ladli Laxmi (Madhya Pradesh), Maiya Samman (Jharkhand), Ladki Bahin (Maharashtra), and the recent ₹10,000 transfer to over one crore women in Bihar under the Mukhyamantri Mahila Rozgar Yojana.
- Financial Inclusion: SHG–Bank linkage, revolving funds, community investment funds.
- Livelihood Promotion: Farm and non-farm enterprises, livestock, fisheries, food processing, services.
- Skill Development: Capacity building, entrepreneurship training, business planning.
- Social Empowerment: Leadership development, gender equity, health, nutrition, and education.
- Convergence: Alignment with schemes of agriculture, animal husbandry, food processing, and social protection.
- Cluster-Level Federations: Successful models like Kudumbashree (Kerala) and Jeevika (Bihar) offer replicable lessons for other States.
Looking Ahead
- DAY NRLM is a community-led development model. By placing women at the centre, it has:
- shifted rural households from subsistence to entrepreneurship;
- strengthened grassroots democracy;
- built financially credible community institutions;
- enabled direct benefit transfers and policy trust in women collectives.
- As the programme enters its next appraisal cycle (2026–31), the focus is expected to move towards:
- Stronger and more autonomous CLFs;
- Higher-order entrepreneurship and scale-up finance;
- Better market access and branding for SHG products;
- Deeper institutional convergence and professional support.
- DAY NRLM represents one of the largest and most impactful women-led development initiatives in the world, with the potential to redefine rural livelihoods in India.
- DAY NRLM needs to evolve beyond debt financing. Equity, venture capital, and blended finance models need exploration through partnerships with SIDBI, NBFCs, neo-banks, and other financial institutions.
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