India's migrant millions: Caught between jobless villages and city
hazards
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[April 18, 2023]
By Krishn Kaushik and Joseph Campbell
NEW DELHI/JAUNPUR, India (Reuters) -As he crosses the mud houses and
wheat fields around his village to catch a train to distant Mumbai,
Sujeet Kumar says he is thinking about the better life that awaits him
in India's city of dreams.
The 21-year-old from Jaunpur district, in India's most populous state of
Uttar Pradesh, was headed for the country’s financial capital, saying he
moved out of "compulsion", like hundreds of millions of others before
him.
"Mumbai is a city of the rich...whoever goes to Mumbai, their luck
changes," Kumar said. "I hope luck smiles on me also there, and I will
also make progress."
This internal migration is bound to intensify as India becomes the
world's most populous nation, throwing up enormous challenges for the
government - managing the strains on urban infrastructure as well as
creating 8 million to 10 million jobs every year to absorb its army of
young unemployed.
According to 2011 figures, the latest available, India's then population
of 1.21 billion people included 456 million internal migrants.
The United Nations had projected India's population would reach over
1.42 billion last week, overtaking China.
Nearly two-thirds of India's people are under 35 and many of those in
the countryside flock to the cities to take whatever job they can -
becoming labourers, drivers or helpers in shops and homes. Many are from
Uttar Pradesh and neighbouring Bihar state, where populations are rising
faster than elsewhere in the country.
"Migrants are always concentrated in more precarious work. Better jobs
are not available to migrants and they have very little political power
to negotiate wages," said Mukta Naik, an expert on migration at New
Delhi's Centre for Policy Research.
"There are not enough jobs, and they are not good enough to attract
people for the long term, not good enough wages to invest in housing, to
get their children to the cities to study."
Besides the low-paid and difficult-to-get jobs, those arriving in the
cities are faced with prohibitive costs of living and a struggle to find
a place to live. They are unable to access social welfare benefits and
many fall victim to the crime rampant in urban slums.
Abdul Nur, a 37-year-old security guard in Bengaluru, said he left his
village in the northeastern state of Assam when he was 17, and has since
lived and worked in Chennai, Hyderabad and Mumbai cities.
"When I was in Mumbai, there was too much tension. It was hot, there was
crime," he said.
He was in India's financial capital a decade ago, where, he said, it was
very tough to live on the 14,000 rupees ($171) he earned a month, with
high rents and cost of food.
But even Bengaluru, India's tech capital which is attracting huge
numbers of migrants, has become too expensive, Nur said.
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A 21-year-old aspiring college student
and migrant worker Sujeet Kumar shoots a video on his mobile phone
while on a local train in Mumbai, India, March 13, 2023.
REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
"I am sending my wife and child back to the village," he said. "In
my salary it is very tough to educate him here. I will live alone
now."
GOING BACK
Some of the migrants have become so disheartened they are returning
home.
Bhikhari Manjhi, 30, left his village in Odisha state and moved to
Bengaluru where he was promised a job as a construction worker with
a salary of 10,000 rupees a month. For two months, his contractor
paid him 100 rupees every week, promised to pay the rest later, but
never did.
"When we demanded our money, we were beaten up," Manjhi said.
Earlier this month, Manjhi walked for about 1,000 km (620 miles)
for over seven days with two fellow villagers to return home.
Now, he said: "We live in the forest area, and can earn about
15,000 rupees in a year."
In cities like Bengaluru, more than that can be made in a month.
But Manjhi said: "I don't want to go back".
A 2020 International Labour Organization report said migrant
workers contribute 10% of India’s GDP and serve as the backbone of
several sectors. The money they send back reduces poverty at home
and improves the well-being of their families, it said.
Experts say the government needs to help create more jobs and
ensure they are distributed across the country, especially in the
poorly-developed and predominantly rural north and the east.
"Rural India (only) provides jobs in the form of disguised
unemployment," said Mahesh Vyas, who heads the Centre for Monitoring
Indian Economy.
This meant, he said, that even if more jobs are created in
agriculture, they do not add to output. And apart from agriculture,
the only investment in the hinterlands is in temporary
infrastructure projects, which produce short-lived jobs.
The cities, with all their shortcomings, will continue to attract
migrants as they remain the best places to offer jobs, he said.
Kumar from Jaunpur echoes that.
Sporting a new haircut and a pair of sunglasses, he shot videos and
photos for his social media accounts during a visit to Mumbai’s
tourist spots.
"I am really liking it here...so much better than my village," he
said.
($1 = 81.6360 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Krishn Kaushik in NEW DELHI; Additional reporting by
Joseph Campbell and Sunil Kataria in JAUNPUR; Editing by YP Rajesh
and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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