हिंदी

Poverty Alleviation Programmes and Their Target Sectors

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Topics

  • Controlling Air Pollution
    • From Domestic Combustionc
    • From Industries
    • From Vehicles
    • Traffic Management
    • Economic Policy
  • Addressing Population
  • Managing the Urban Environment
    • Urbanisation in India
    • Planning Environmental Improvement
    • Rural Development to Counter Migration
    • Development of Secondary Cities to Counter Migration
    • Community Participation and Contribution of Private Enterprises
  • Managing Soil and Land
  • Food
    • Sustainable Agriculture
    • Problem of Global Food Security, Food Aid
  • Biodiversity
    • Biodiversity at Risk Due to Human Actions
    • Conserving Our Genetic Resource: In-situ and Ex-situ; Harvesting Wildlife
    • Conservation Strategies at National and International Levels
  • Energy
    • Fossil Fuels Used to Produce Electricity
    • A Sustainable Energy Future
  • Waste
  • Environment and Development
  • Towards a Sustainable Future
    • Global Interdependence – Economic and Environmental
    • International Cooperation
    • Concept of Sustainable Development
    • Role of Non-governmental Organisations
    • Technology that Sustains
  • Poverty Alleviation Programs
  • Real-Life Application
  • Key Point Summary
Maharashtra State Board: Class 11

Poverty Alleviation Programs

  • Wage Employment (EGS, MGNREGS): The government guarantees a minimum number of paid workdays for adults in rural households, typically through projects like roads, wells, or public causeways.
  • Self-Employment (SGSY): Poor families are organised into self-help groups, receive training and funding, and can start micro-enterprises like tailoring, dairy, or small shops.
  • Financial Inclusion (JDY): Every household can open a bank account and receive insurance, pensions, and subsidies directly via the account. Debit cards and overdraft facilities are included.
  • Sanitation (SBM): Focus on building toilets and cleaning public spaces; promoting hygiene for health benefits.
  • Education (SSA): All children have access to free, quality elementary education; it bridges gender and social gaps.
  • Food Security (AAY): Targets the poorest, providing subsidised grains via ration cards.
  • Housing (PMAY): Financial support for building safe and affordable houses in rural areas.
  • Health (NHM): Addresses gaps in healthcare through improved health centres, immunisation drives, and support for mothers/children.
Maharashtra State Board: Class 11

Real-Life Application

  • MGNREGS: A villager registers for work, builds a pond and gets wages weekly credited to a bank account—helping feed the family during the non-farm season.
  • JDY: A small grocer opens a bank account under JDY, secures accident insurance, and receives subsidy payments digitally.
  • SGSY: A group of weavers receives training, a loan, and starts selling products locally as a "self-help group enterprise".
Maharashtra State Board: Class 11

Key Point Summary

  • Schemes target essentials: work, money, education, food, home, health, and sanitation.
  • Eligibility often depends on poverty level, rural residence, or weaker social status.
  • Participation means not only benefits but also active steps (registering, joining groups, etc.).
  • Welfare schemes aim to uplift marginalised sections and bridge gaps between urban and rural India.

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