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Inclusion of Interstate Migrant Workers in Kerala and Lessons for India

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Abstract

An estimated 3.5 million interstate migrant workers have become an indispensable part of Kerala’s economy. The state also offers the highest wages for migrant workers for jobs in the unorganised sector in the entire Indian subcontinent. Further, the state has evolved several measures for the inclusion of the workers and was able to effectively respond to their distress during the national lockdown. This paper examines labour migration to Kerala, key measures by the government to promote the social security of the workers and the state’s response to the distress of migrant workers during lockdown, by synthesising the available secondary evidence. The welfare measures as well as interventions initiated by the state are exemplary and promising given the intent and provisions. However, some of them do not appear to have consideration of the grassroots requirements and implementation mechanisms to enhance access. As a result, the policy intent and substantial investments have not yielded the expected results. The state’s effective response to the distress of workers during the lockdown emanates from its overall disaster preparedness and resilience achieved from confronting with two consecutive state-wide natural disasters and a public health emergency in the immediate past. While the government has played a strategic role through policy imperative and ensuring a synergistic response, the data presented by the state indicate a much larger but invisible role played by the employers and civil society in providing food and shelter to workers.

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Notes

  1. Based on the call data analysis from Bandhu Helpline, a multilingual helpline implemented by CMID in partnership with ESAF Bank and Gram Vikas during the COVID 19 lockdown for the support to distressed migrant workers in Kerala.

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Correspondence to Benoy Peter.

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Peter, B., Sanghvi, S. & Narendran, V. Inclusion of Interstate Migrant Workers in Kerala and Lessons for India. Ind. J. Labour Econ. 63, 1065–1086 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s41027-020-00292-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s41027-020-00292-9

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