Revised Wage Rates under VB-G RAM G Act, 2025
| General Studies Paper II: Employment, Government Policies & Interventions |
Why in News?
Recently, the Central Government notified revised wage rates under the VB-G RAM G Act, 2025, introducing a ₹300 daily minimum base wage.

What is the VB-G RAM G Act, 2025?
- About: The Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) (VB-G RAM G) Act, 2025 is a landmark rural employment legislation that replaces the Mahatma Gandhi NREGA.
- It act provides 125 days of guaranteed unskilled wage employment per rural household, linking rural development with the Viksit Bharat @2047 vision.
- Objective: Its objective is shifting focus from basic welfare to infrastructure-led growth, climate resilience, and sustainable livelihood generation.
- Background: The act succeeds the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), which was firstly introduced in 2005 to guarantee 100 days of employment.
- Evolving rural dynamics the VB-G RAM G Bill, 2025 was introduced in the Lok Sabha on December 16, 2025.
- After rigorous debate, the legislation was passed by the Lok Sabha on December 18, 2025.
- It was subsequently passed by the Rajya Sabha on December 18, 2025, and received Presidential assent on December 20, 2025.
- Enactment: The act was enacted and officially brought into force across all rural areas of India on July 1, 2026.
- Implementation: The Ministry of Rural Development is the apex implementation authority, in tandem with State Departments and local Gram Panchayats.
- Provisions:
- 60-Day Work Pause: To ensure availability of agricultural labour, no work shall be executed during an aggregated 60-day pause period notified for peak sowing and harvesting seasons. The 125 days of work are guaranteed during the remaining period.
- Fund Sharing Pattern: The financial liability operates on a normative funding ratio of 60:40 between the Centre and most states.
- For North Eastern, Himalayan states, and Union Territories, the funding ratio is 90:10.
- Availability: Unlike the universal coverage under MGNREGA, employment under the new Act will be available only in rural areas notified by the Union Government.
- Four Priority Verticals: Employment creation is strategically integrated with durable rural infrastructure development across four verticals: water conservation, rural connectivity, livelihood infrastructure, and climate resilience projects.
- Decentralized Planning: Planning and execution are decentralized through Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans, aim to saturate local development requirements in systemic alignment with state and national master plans.
- Technology-Driven Governance: The framework makes digital attendance, face authentication, and geo-tagging at worksites mandatory.
- This drives digital governance and the Viksit Bharat National Rural Infrastructure Stack ensures transparency.
- Unemployment Allowance: If an applicant is not provided employment within 15 days of demanding work, the state government is legally mandated to pay them an unemployment allowance.
- Weekly Wage Disbursement: The act mandates the disbursement of daily wages on a weekly basis, or no later than a fortnight through DBT. If delayed beyond 16 days, compensation must be provided to the wage seekers.
- Social Audit: The Gram Sabha must conduct mandatory social audits of worksites to ensure accountability.
- The act requires local bodies to make all muster rolls, bills, and digital records fully available for public scrutiny.
Highlights of Revised Wage Rates under VB-G RAM G Act, 2025
- Nationwide Revision: The Central Government has notified revised wage rates under Section 10 of the VB-G RAM G Act, 2025. Wage rates have been increased across all 34 States/UTs and wage regions, replacing the earlier MGNREGA rates.
- Minimum Wage Benchmark: A uniform interim base wage of ₹300 per day has been introduced for rural unskilled workers.
- Twenty-one States/UTs that earlier had wages below ₹300 have been raised to this benchmark, reducing long-standing regional wage disparities.
- The national average notified wage has increased from ₹298.8 under MGNREGA to ₹327.4 per day under the VB-G RAM G framework, representing an average increase of ₹28.6 or over 10% nationwide.
- Benchmark Wage: States such as Bihar, Odisha, Assam, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Manipur and Ladakh now receive the uniform ₹300 daily wage.
- Highest Wage: The highest notified wages include Haryana ₹409, Goa ₹406, Kerala ₹401, Karnataka ₹349, and Punjab ₹336, reflecting historically higher rural wage structures and inflation-linked revisions.
- Moderate Wage: Several States fall in the intermediate wage band, including Andhra Pradesh ₹307, Rajasthan ₹308, Maharashtra ₹312, Gujarat ₹316, Himachal Pradesh ₹328, and Jammu & Kashmir ₹329.
Socio-Economic Impact
- Stronger Rural Income Security: The Act increases the statutory employment guarantee while revising the minimum daily wage to ₹300. This combination is expected to provide greater income stability, reduce seasonal unemployment, and improve the financial resilience of vulnerable rural households.
- Higher Rural Consumption Demand: An increase in guaranteed workdays and wages is expected to raise household purchasing power, stimulating expenditure on food, healthcare, education, clothing and consumer goods.
- Higher rural demand can generate multiplier effects across local markets and support broader economic growth.
- Improved Livelihood Resilience: The Act shifts from short-term relief to sustainable livelihood creation through durable assets such as water conservation, irrigation, rural roads and climate-resilient infrastructure, strengthening long-term rural productivity beyond wage employment.
- Women’s Economic Empowerment: The legislation mandates at least one-third participation of women, prioritises women-headed households.
- It promotes creation of SHG infrastructure, nurseries, livestock facilities and rural markets, enhancing female labour-force participation.
- Reduction in Rural Distress Migration: By guaranteeing 125 days of local employment with higher wages, the Act aims to reduce seasonal migration to urban areas, allowing workers to remain within their villages while supporting local economies.
- Strengthened Financial Inclusion: Mandatory Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) into bank or post-office accounts, along with statutory provisions for weekly or within-15-day wage payments, promotes formal financial inclusion and reduces payment leakages.
- Economic Transformation: The legislation shifts rural employment from a welfare-centric approach to a development-oriented framework, linking employment generation with durable public assets and national vision.
Other Government Initiatives to Promote Rural Employment Growth
- Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana–National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM): Launched in 2011, DAY-NRLM promotes Self-Help Groups (SHGs), financial inclusion and rural entrepreneurship.
- It has mobilized over 10 crore rural women into nearly 91 lakh SHGs, with cumulative bank credit exceeding ₹11 lakh crore.
- Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Grameen Kaushalya Yojana (DDU-GKY): Started in 2014, DDU-GKY provides placement-linked skill training for rural youth.
- The programme has trained over 17 lakh candidates and facilitated more than 11 lakh placements, improving rural employability.
- Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY) – 2015: Launched in 2015, PMKSY promotes efficient irrigation under the motto “Har Khet Ko Pani” and “Per Drop More Crop”, improving water-use efficiency, agricultural productivity and farmers’ incomes.
- SVAMITVA Scheme: Introduced in 2020, SVAMITVA provides property cards to rural households using drone surveys. It strengthens property rights, facilitates institutional credit and reduces land disputes, promoting rural economic empowerment.
- Lakhpati Didi Initiative: Launched in 2023, the initiative aims to help 3 crore SHG women earn over ₹1 lakh annually.
- By 2025, around 1.5 crore women had already achieved the Lakhpati Didi milestone through diversified livelihood activities.
FAQs:
- What is the new minimum daily wage under the VB-G RAM G Act, 2025?
The revised minimum base wage is ₹300 per day, effective from 1 July 2026. - When did the revised wage rates come into effect?
The revised wage rates became effective from 1 July 2026, alongside nationwide implementation of the Act. - How many days of employment does the Act guarantee?
The Act guarantees 125 days of unskilled wage employment annually for every eligible rural household. - How are wage rates determined under the Act?
The Centre notifies state-specific wage rates using annual indexation and a transparent methodology with a ₹300 minimum. - How and when are wages paid to workers?
Wages are paid through DBT, weekly or within 15 days after muster roll closure.
Disclaimer: Information in this article is based on official announcements and public records. Regulations and implementation details may evolve over time.
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