2016
DOI: 10.1177/0973703016648028
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Labour Migration to the Construction Sector in India and its Impact on Rural Poverty

Abstract: The present article studies the impact of migration to the construction sector on rural poverty in India based on field survey. The survey has been carried out in two phases, the first phase involving the survey of construction workers in National Capital Region and the second phase comparing the well-being of migrant households with non migrant households in selected source villages. The study finds that at destination, workers have poor living and working conditions, lack citizenship rights, entitlements and… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…They show that the bulk of these migrants also hail from marginalised sections of the country and from among the lower-income quintile groups (Table 1 ). A number of these migrants are also involved in employment in the informal sector, making them some of the most vulnerable working groups, which further exclude them from social security benefits and even basic rights at the workplace (Srivastava and Sutradhar 2016 ; Government of India 2017b ).…”
Section: Section I: Internal Migration In India: Attributes and Pattementioning
confidence: 99%
“…They show that the bulk of these migrants also hail from marginalised sections of the country and from among the lower-income quintile groups (Table 1 ). A number of these migrants are also involved in employment in the informal sector, making them some of the most vulnerable working groups, which further exclude them from social security benefits and even basic rights at the workplace (Srivastava and Sutradhar 2016 ; Government of India 2017b ).…”
Section: Section I: Internal Migration In India: Attributes and Pattementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The shift from agricultural jobs has not brought any respite as most of the workers moved to the industries such as construction and manufacturing in the recent years, which is propelled by the high rates of internal migration in India (Agrawal & Chandrasekhar, 2015). According to latest National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) estimates, the construction sector is one of the most predominant sectors employing labour migrants and is also a sector which has seen a rapid increase in employment in the recent years (Srivastava & Sutradhar, 2016). What is appalling is that most of the new jobs being created in the formal sector are actually informal because the workers do not have access to employment benefits or social security (ILO Country Office for India, 2016).…”
Section: Box A: Vulnerable Employment In Indiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Internal migration in developing countries is a crucial livelihood strategy for low‐income households and communities and it has positive changes in both sending and receiving areas (Deshingkar and Grimm, 2005; McKenzie and Yang, 2010; Mohanty et al, 2016; Srivastava and Sutradhar, 2016; Nayyar and Kim, 2018). Despite this, internal migration continues to be viewed as a destabilising process by policy makers and they do not acknowledge the beneficial effect that it has on development (Nyberg‐Sørensen et al, 2002; Deshingkar and Grimm, 2005; Kundu and Sarangi, 2007; Geiger and Pécoud, 2013; Bhavnani and Lacina, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%