Rural and Urban Economy in Assam

Rural and Urban Economy in Assam

Rural Livelihoods in Assam

Rural economy forms the backbone of Assam, with nearly 85–86% population living in rural areas and about 70% workforce dependent on agriculture and allied activities.

(A) Main Sources of Rural Livelihood

1. Agriculture (Core Sector)
    • Agriculture is the primary occupation of rural Assam.
      • Major crop: Rice (staple food crop)
      • Other crops: Pulses, oilseeds, horticultural crops
      • Plantation link: Tea (small growers also contribute)
Characteristics
      • Subsistence farming
      • High dependence on monsoon rainfall
      • Dominance of small and marginal farmers (≈83%)
      • Low mechanisation and productivity
2. Allied Activities
    • Rural economy is diversified beyond crops:
      • Livestock (piggery, cattle, poultry)
      • Fisheries
      • Sericulture (Muga and Eri silk)
      • Handloom and handicrafts
      • Horticulture and organic farming (emerging trend)

(B) Key Features of Rural Economy

  • Predominantly primary sector-based
  • High dependence on natural conditions
  • Presence of disguised unemployment
  • Seasonal nature of employment
  • Growing role of women-led enterprises

(C) Major Problems in Rural Economy

  • Floods and riverbank erosion (annual losses of crops and livestock)
  • Fragmented landholdings
  • Low agricultural productivity
  • Seasonal unemployment
  • Poor infrastructure and market access
  • High migration of rural youth

(D) Government Support & Recent Trends

  • MGNREGA – wage employment guarantee
  • Orunodoi Scheme – direct income support to vulnerable households
  • Promotion of integrated farming systems
  • Growth of non-farm activities
  • Rise of women entrepreneurship and SHG-based livelihoods

Self Help Groups (SHGs) in Assam

SHGs are a major tool of women empowerment and financial inclusion under DAY-NRLM (Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission).

(A) Importance of SHGs

  • Promote microfinance access
  • Encourage women empowerment
  • Support micro-enterprises
  • Improve saving habits and financial discipline

(B) Current Status (approx.)

  • Over 3.5 lakh active SHGs
  • Around 39–40 lakh households mobilised
  • Majority are women-led groups

(C) Key Initiatives

  • Lakhpati Baideo / Lakhpati Didi Model
    • Target: Women earning ₹1 lakh+ annually
    • Activities: dairy, poultry, weaving, food processing, handicrafts
  • Samaveshi Aajeevika Yojana (SAY)
    • Focus on vulnerable households
  • ASRLM (Assam State Rural Livelihoods Mission)
    • Training, skill development, market linkage
  • Convergence with Panchayats and welfare schemes

(D) Achievements

  • Improved financial inclusion
  • Rise in women-led rural enterprises
  • Reduction in poverty levels
  • Strengthening of collective bargaining power

(E) Challenges

  • Weak market linkage
  • Lack of advanced skill training
  • Sustainability of enterprises
  • Credit access gaps in remote areas

Panchayati Raj System in Assam

Panchayati Raj is the backbone of rural self-governance and decentralised development (73rd Constitutional Amendment).

(A) Structure (Three-Tier System)

  • Gaon Panchayat (Village level)
  • Anchalik Panchayat (Block level)
  • Zila Parishad (District level)

(B) Features

  • Covers 29 subjects under the 11th Schedule
  • Around 50% reservation for women
  • Supported by Finance Commission grants
  • Use of e-governance tools (eGramSwaraj)

(C) Role

  • Implementation of rural development schemes
  • Local infrastructure development
  • Welfare delivery at grassroots level
  • Ensures participatory democracy

(D) Issues

  • Low financial independence
  • Limited administrative capacity
  • Dependence on state government funds
  • Political interference

Rural Credit in Assam

Credit is essential for agricultural growth and rural development.

(A) Sources of Credit

Institutional Sources
    • Commercial Banks
    • Regional Rural Banks (Assam Gramin Vikash Bank)
    • Cooperative banks
    • NABARD
    • SHG-bank linkage system
Schemes
    • Kisan Credit Card (KCC)
    • PM Mudra Yojana
    • Priority sector lending
Non-Institutional Sources
    • Moneylenders
    • Traders

(B) Challenges

  • Limited banking access in remote/flood-prone areas
  • High dependence on informal credit
  • Loan default risks due to floods
  • Collateral and documentation issues

(C) Recent Improvements

  • Growth of digital banking
  • Expansion of SHG credit linkage
  • Formation of Joint Liability Groups (JLGs)
  • Better financial inclusion through DBT schemes

Urbanization Trends in Assam

Assam is a slowly urbanising state, with urban population still below the national average.

(A) Key Urban Centres

    • Guwahati (largest city and primate city)
    • Dibrugarh
    • Silchar
    • Jorhat
    • Tezpur

(B) Drivers of Urbanization

  • Rural–urban migration for jobs and education
  • Growth of administrative centres
  • Expansion of infrastructure and services

(C) Problems of Urbanization

  • Unplanned urban growth
  • Formation of slums
  • Traffic congestion
  • Waste management issues
  • Flood vulnerability in towns

(D) Positive Trends

  • Growth of service sector jobs
  • Expansion of education, healthcare, tourism
  • Rise of startups and gig economy

Guwahati as Growth Pole

  • Guwahati is the economic and commercial hub of Northeast India, acting as a growth pole.

(A) Functions

  • Economic hub: banking, trade, services
  • Transport hub: rail, road, air connectivity
  • Educational & healthcare centre
  • Administrative centre

(B) Importance

  • Drives regional economic growth
  • Attracts investment and migration
  • Creates backward and forward linkages

(C) Recent Developments

  • Smart City projects
  • Infrastructure expansion (ring roads, flyovers)
  • Investment promotion via Advantage Assam Summits
  • Role in Act East Policy

(D) Challenges

  • Traffic congestion
  • Flooding from Brahmaputra
  • Housing shortage
  • Environmental degradation

Smart City Mission in Assam

(A) Guwahati Smart City Project

  • Focus city under Smart Cities Mission
  • Cost: ~₹2,296 crore

(B) Key Components

  • Smart transport systems
  • E-governance and digital services
  • Waste management systems
  • Smart surveillance
  • Water and sewerage systems

(C) Objectives

  • Improve quality of urban life
  • Promote sustainable urban development
  • Enhance digital infrastructure

(D) Challenges

  • Project delays
  • Funding issues
  • Rapid urban population growth
  • Flood resilience concerns

Urban Employment in Assam

  • Urban employment is mainly concentrated in the service sector.

(A) Major Employment Sectors

  • Services: banking, retail, education, healthcare
  • Government jobs: major employer
  • Construction and transport
  • Informal sector: street vending, small shops

(B) Emerging Sectors

  • IT and startups
  • Tourism and hospitality
  • Gig economy and retail expansion

(C) Key Issues

  • High urban unemployment (especially educated youth)
  • Skill mismatch
  • Dominance of informal employment
  • Limited industrial base

(D) Government Initiatives

  • Skill development programmes
  • DAY-NULM (Urban livelihood mission)
  • MSME and entrepreneurship support

Overall Structure of Assam Economy (Rural vs Urban)

AspectRural EconomyUrban Economy
Dominant sectorAgriculture & alliedServices sector
EmploymentHigh but low productivityLimited but formal/informal mix
Income levelLowRelatively higher
Key issueVulnerability (floods, poverty)Unemployment & congestion
Growth trendDiversifying slowlyExpanding rapidly

 

Assam’s economy reflects a dual structure:

  • The rural economy is agriculture-dependent, vulnerable, and low-productivity, but gradually diversifying through SHGs, welfare schemes, and allied sectors.
  • The urban economy is service-driven, growing, but facing issues of unemployment and unplanned expansion.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen rural diversification and agro-based industries
  • Improve urban planning and infrastructure
  • Bridge skill gaps through education and training
  • Promote balanced and inclusive regional development

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