Impact of Migration on Poverty: The Case of Construction Workers of India, Nepal and Bangladesh
Principal Researchers:
Prof. Ravi Srivastava
Theme: Growth and Employment, Security and Vulnerability
Sponsors: The University of Sussex
Aims & Objectives: This project was a three country study on India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. The Indian leg of the project was based on a survey of migrant construction workers employed in the National Capital Region (NCR) sites.
Methodology: It surveyed 150 construction workers at three types of construction sites selected purposively after initial mapping exercises. Also, two source villages were identified from Bihar and West Bengal and a sample of 80 households was taken that included both migrant and non-migrant labour households.
Findings: The findings of the study revealed that:
- Most workers are seasonal or circular migrants from areas with inadequate livelihood opportunities. The workplace is segmented along migration streams, functions and gender;
- Contractors play a crucial role in recruiting workers and determining their wages and working conditions. Long distance migrants recruited at origin have little bargaining capacity;
- Generally, workers and their families have poor living and working conditions, lack citizenship rights, entitlements and voice;
- Their wages are lower than the legal minimum. Most workers, and all female workers, remain stuck in low paid and low skilled jobs;
- Migrant workers perceive that they are better off in terms of quantum of employment and remuneration than at origin, but perceive their housing and living conditions to be poorer;
- At origin, migrants are able to secure employment for longer duration and receive higher wages than non-migrants. Their remittances are used to boost consumption, the condition of residential housing, expenditure on children’s education and selective investment in other assets;
- Higher wage incomes among migrants compared to similarly placed non-migrants indicates that migrant labourers have more income to improve the living conditions of family members and
- Migrants perceive faster change in their economic condition compared to their non-migrant counterparts.
Recommendations: The policy recommendations were:
- Simplify and reform labour laws (especially laws on labour migration) with better enforcement;
- Make worker’s dues and working conditions a joint liability of contractors and outsourcers;
- Implement amendments to the Building and Construction Workers’ Welfare Act;
- Frame policies for better regional and urban development and
- Make provision for enhancing skill base and skill acquisition.