70% informal workers SC, ST, OBCs; majority in farm sector
- Of the over 7.86 crore registrations on the e-Shram portal — the country’s first centralised database of unorganised workers seeded with Aadhaar — 40.5 per cent belong to Other Backward Classes (OBCs), 27.4 per cent to the general category, 23.7 per cent to the Scheduled Castes and 8.3 per cent to the Scheduled Tribes.
- The estimations are significant because they offer, for the first time, an indicator of the social profile of the informal sector workers in the country.
- According to the 2011 Census, the population share of SCs stood at 16.2 per cent and 8.2 per cent for STs. The count of OBCs is not detailed in the Census, but a 2007 survey by the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) had pegged the population share of OBCs at 40.9 per cent. The general category population works out to around 34 per cent.
e-shram portal:
- The Ministry of Labour and Employment has launched the e-Shram Portal for creating a National Database of Unorganized Workers (NDUW), which will be seeded with Aadhaar.
- It is the first-ever national database of unorganised workers including migrant workers, construction workers, gig and platform workers, etc. The Portal will prove to be a huge boost towards the last-mile delivery of the welfare schemes for crores of unorganized workers.
Key Points:
- It is for the first time in the country that a system has been developed to register 38 crore Unorganised Workers
- The e-Shram portal will cover all unorganised workers of the nation and help link them to social security schemes of the Government of India
- Under the scheme, Rs 2.0 Lakh Accidental Insurance cover will be provided to every registered (on eShram portal) unorganised worker
- If a worker is registered on the eShram portal and meets with an accident, he will be eligible for Rs 2.0 Lakh on death or permanent disability and Rs 1.0 lakh on partial disability
- Every registered unorganised worker shall be issued an eSHRAM card with a unique Universal Account Number (UAN) and will be able to access the benefits of the various social security schemes through this Card anywhere anytime.
Objectives of the Portal:
- Given below are the objectives of launching a specified portal for unorganised workers in the country:
- Creation of a centralized database of all unorganized workers (UWs) including Construction Workers, Migrant Workers, Gig and Platform workers, Street Vendors, Domestic Workers, Agriculture Workers, etc.
- To improve the implementation efficiency of the social security services for the unorganized workers
- Portability of the social security and welfare benefits to the migrant and construction workers.
- Providing a comprehensive database to Central and State Governments for tackling any National Crises like COVID-19 in future.
- Easy to share information with the various stakeholders such as Ministries/ Departments/ Boards/ Agencies/ Organisations of the Central & State Governments
- eShram Portal – Eligibility Criteria
- A set of eligibility requirements have been released by the Ministry and only the eligible workers, who fulfil all the criteria can register themselves on the portal.
- An unorganised worker between the age of 16 and 59 years
- The worker must not be a member of EPFO/ESIC or NPS.
Report:
- The portal has been recording primary and secondary occupation of unorganised sector workers, with those in rural areas routinely recording two occupations.
- “There are many unorganised workers who shift between informal and formal work and even among occupations. Say, an agricultural labourer may also work as a construction worker at a different point of time in the year.
- So, the portal is registering information based on primary and secondary occupation. Usually for rural areas, two occupations are being seen for the unorganised workers.
- For agriculture, West Bengal leads with a 13.38 per cent share or 1.05 crore registrations, followed by Odisha with 10.5 per cent share (82.6 lakh), Uttar Pradesh with 9.15 per cent (71.9 lakh), Bihar with 5.71 per cent (44.9 lakh) and Jharkhand with 3.03 per cent (23.82 lakh).
- The highest registrations have been seen for crop and farm labourers and field crop and vegetable growers.
- In the construction sector, West Bengal leads with 17.03 lakh registrations, followed by Uttar Pradesh (14.95 lakh), Bihar (13.13 lakh) and Odisha (12.04 lakh), with the highest registrations being recorded for building and construction workers followed by those working on houses.
- At 68.47 lakh, the third highest registrations have been seen for the occupation category of ‘domestic and household workers’, of which the highest share is of domestic cooks (56.02 lakh) followed by cleaners and helpers (12.45 lakh). Uttar Pradesh has recorded the highest share of registrations for domestic and household workers at 21.63 lakh, followed by West Bengal at 14.29 lakh and Bihar at 13 lakh.
- The government recently expanded the occupational categories from 160 to 400 to enable a wider classification of the work profiles of unorganised sector workers. “The categories will help workers to register their nature of work in detail and later on also help in matching requirements for employment opportunities,” the ministry official added.
- Women workers account for 51.61 per cent of the total registrations. Over 61 per cent of the total registrations are by workers belonging to the 18-40 years age group. Also, 86.33 per cent of the total registrations are linked with bank accounts.
- The income-wise classification of the registration data shows that 92 per cent of the registrants have monthly income of Rs 10,000 and below, 6 per cent have income between Rs 10,000-15,000. Besides, 1 per cent have income between Rs 15,000-18,000 and 0.5 per cent have income between Rs 18,000-21,000, the data showed.
