Strengthening the case for India’s national livelihoods program
Context
India is home to more than a fifth of the world’s poor, and 75 percent of them live in rural India. To build upon previous programs to overcome the constraints to rural poverty alleviation and facilitate the creation of rural livelihoods, the government of India launched the National Rural Livelihoods Project in 2011–12. The objective was to create a proof of concept that could help inform rural livelihoods interventions across the country. The project started under the National Rural Livelihood Mission, agenda aimed to cover 70 million rural poor households, across 600 districts, through self-help groups (SHGs) and support SHGs and their federations in becoming livelihoods collectives within 8–10 years. In addition, the poor were to be facilitated to achieve increased access to rights, entitlements and public services; diversified risk; and better social indicators of empowerment.
In line with the objective of generating evidence on what works to reduce poverty and improve inclusion and empowerment among rural poor, the Ministry of Rural Development commissioned several impact evaluations of the World Bank–supported project, including an impact evaluation that 3ie conducted between 2019 and 2020. The 3ie evaluation sought to assess whether the National Rural Livelihoods Mission, now called the Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana-National Rural Livelihood Mission (DAY-NRLM), impacted financial inclusion, incomes and livelihoods and women’s social and economic inclusion and empowerment after two and a half years of participation. The evaluation covered 5,000 SHGs across nine intervention states: Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Odisha, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.
Evidence
The evaluation found significant positive impacts on household incomes, including increases in saving for older SHGs, household income sources, hours of work for men and the number of women engaged in productive secondary work. The study found increased access to SHG loans by scheduled castes and scheduled tribes and increased borrowing by women from SHGs and by men from formal sources. The findings showed that participant households availed themselves of more social schemes and depended less on informal loans. Evaluation findings demonstrated that the federated structure of SHGs was an important driver of impacts on loan amounts, household productive assets, increased expenditure on education and food, and women’s confidence to engage with the community. However, the evaluation found that SHGs need to improve equity in loan distribution and may not be able to benefit the poorest of the poor in all contexts.
Evidence impacts
Type of impact: Inform discussions of policies and programmes
When subsequent phases of the evaluated programme or policy draw from the findings of the evaluation or review, and/or the study team participates in informing the design of a subsequent phase.
This is one of 3ie’s seven types of evidence use. Impact types are based on what we find in the monitoring data for an evaluation or review. Due to the nature of evidence-informed decision-making and action, 3ie looks for verifiable contributions that our evidence makes, not attribution.
Read our complete evidence impact typology and verification approach here.
Close windowIn September 2020, India’s then–minister of rural development, Narendra Singh Tomar, cited the 3ie evaluation and shared study findings in response to a question from a lawmaker in the Upper House of the Indian Parliament (Rajya Sabha). The lawmaker’s questions pertained to the details and impacts of funding provided to SHGs under the DAY-NRLM and came weeks after the researchers shared evaluation findings with ministry officials. In July 2021, India’s new rural development minister, Giriraj Singh, mentioned the 3ie study and outlined its key findings in the Rajya Sabha in response to a question on SHG loans and results of studies on the impact of the DAY-NRLM. In December 2022, the union minister of state for rural development, Sadhvi Niranjan Jyoti, cited the 3ie study findings in a written response to a question on the loan repayment rate by SHGs in the Rajya Sabha .
Type of impact: Inform discussions of policies and programmes
When subsequent phases of the evaluated programme or policy draw from the findings of the evaluation or review, and/or the study team participates in informing the design of a subsequent phase.
This is one of 3ie’s seven types of evidence use. Impact types are based on what we find in the monitoring data for an evaluation or review. Due to the nature of evidence-informed decision-making and action, 3ie looks for verifiable contributions that our evidence makes, not attribution.
Read our complete evidence impact typology and verification approach here.
Close windowPreliminary findings and engagements also informed the World Bank, which provides funding and technical support to the government of India’s livelihoods program. World Bank’s documents highlighted the findings, particularly on the importance of federating the SHGs, as informing the next phases of the DAY-NRLM and the World Bank–supported National Rural Economic Transformation Project.
Type of impact: Inform global guidelines and policy discussions
When findings from an evaluation or review can be traced to discussions or actions. Examples include governments or multilateral or bilateral donors’ mentioning the findings to inform policy or programming. To date, we have only one case of an individual impact evaluation informing global health guidelines. WHO guidelines require that the guidance is based on randomised evaluation evidence.
This is one of 3ie’s seven types of evidence use. Impact types are based on what we find in the monitoring data for an evaluation or review. Due to the nature of evidence-informed decision-making and action, 3ie looks for verifiable contributions that our evidence makes, not attribution.
Read our complete evidence impact typology and verification approach here.
Close windowFindings from the 3ie evaluation were cited in The State of the Economic Inclusion Report 2021: The Potential to Scale commissioned by the World Bank and the Partnership for Economic Inclusion. This report presents data and evidence from 219 programs in 75 countries that are reaching over 90 million beneficiaries. This report moves forward key debates on program impact and costs, which are central to the sustainability of economic inclusion programs at scale. 3ie engaged with the World Bank, which was part of the 3ie impact evaluation advisory group, throughout the research cycle and jointly shared learning on the role of women’s collectives and community institutions in rural transformation at a 3ie conference in January 2021.
Suggested citation
3ie , 2023. Strengthening the case for India’s national livelihoods program (online summary), Evidence Impact Summaries. New Delhi: International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie)
Evidence impact summaries aim to demonstrate and encourage the use of evidence to inform programming and policymaking. These reflect the information available to 3ie at the time of posting. Since several factors influence policymaking, the summaries highlight contributions of evidence rather than endorsing a policy or decision or claiming that it can be attributed solely to evidence. If you have any suggestions or updates to improve this summary, please write to influence@3ieimpact.org