India’s National Rural Livelihood Mission (NRLM) is increasingly being seen as a model of development diplomacy in the Global South. Examine how community-based institutional models like Self-Help Groups (SHGs) contribute to both domestic transformation and international cooperation. (15 Marks, 250 Words)

Introduction:

India’s National Rural Livelihood Mission (NRLM), launched in 2011, represents a shift from welfare-based approaches to institution-based poverty alleviation. By organizing rural poor, especially women, into Self Help Groups (SHGs), it has not only transformed rural livelihoods domestically but is also emerging as a tool of India’s development diplomacy in the Global South.

Role of SHG-based Models in Domestic Transformation:

  • NRLM has enabled large-scale social mobilization, covering over 100 million households and forming more than nine million SHGs across India.
  • It has enhanced financial inclusion by linking SHGs with formal banking systems, leading to credit access worth lakhs of crores.
  • Women’s economic empowerment has improved significantly, with increased income generation and higher female labour force participation.
  • The model has built federated community institutions at village, cluster, and block levels, ensuring decentralized governance.
  • It has strengthened last-mile service delivery through trained community cadres, improving access to welfare schemes and financial services.
  • The focus on savings, peer learning, and collective action has created sustainable and resilient livelihood systems.

Contribution to Development Diplomacy:

  • NRLM has emerged as a scalable and adaptable model for other developing countries, particularly in Africa.
  • Countries like Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, and Rwanda are studying India’s SHG framework for replication.
  • It reflects a shift in India’s development cooperation from financial aid to knowledge and institution-sharing.
  • The model promotes South-South cooperation through peer learning and context-specific solutions.
  • It strengthens long-term partnerships by building institutional linkages between governments, communities, and development agencies.

Challenges and Limitations:

  • Variations in socio-political contexts may limit direct replication in other countries.
  • Capacity constraints and institutional weaknesses in partner countries can affect implementation.
  • Sustaining financial discipline and accountability at scale remains a challenge.

Way Forward:

  • India should institutionalize knowledge-sharing through platforms like a Rural Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange mechanism.
  • Expanding training, fellowships, and pilot projects can help adapt the model to local contexts globally.

Conclusion:

NRLM demonstrates how grassroots institutional innovation can drive both inclusive development and global influence. By exporting its community-based models, India is shaping a new paradigm of development diplomacy rooted in shared learning and sustainable institution-building.

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