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Bengali Migrant Workers in South India: A Mixed-Method Inquiry into Their Earnings, Livings and Struggle During Covid Pandemic

Monalisha Chakraborty (), Subrata Mukherjee () and Priyanka Dasgupta ()
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Monalisha Chakraborty: Institute of Development Studies Kolkata
Subrata Mukherjee: Institute of Development Studies Kolkata
Priyanka Dasgupta: Institute of Development Studies Kolkata

The Indian Journal of Labour Economics, 2022, vol. 65, issue 2, No 8, 425-443

Abstract: Abstract This study has tried to compare the earning and non-earning aspects of migrant workers from West Bengal engaged in different types of work in Karnataka and Kerala based on survey of 111 Bengali-speaking migrant workers and a number of in-depth interviews and FGDs. The study has found that most of the migrant workers landed in south India only after working in Kolkata, northern or western Indian cities. Lack of regular employment opportunities and low-wage rate in rural as well as urban West Bengal are the dominant reasons for their migration. Hostile social environment and increasing earning uncertainties in northern and western Indian cities along with higher-wage rate in south India are reasons for the migrant workers shifting to south India. On an average, they earn Rs. 1.7 lakhs annually and are able to send almost two-thirds of their earnings as remittances. Except the rag pickers in Bengaluru, all other migrant workers live without their families at destination locations. The living conditions of the migrant workers, especially the rag pickers, are poor. Continuous inflow of migrant workers from eastern and north-eastern India is now a challenge for the incumbent Bengali migrant workers in south India; however, majority of them are not willing to return to West Bengal in future. The pandemic and successive rounds of lockdown in destination and home states have unsettled their lives. Not only their income has fallen, getting job and movement across different destination locations has become uncertain too. They have now hardly any resource to cope up with this continuing uncertainty.

Keywords: Migration; Employment; South India; Pandemic; Lockdown; West Bengal (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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DOI: 10.1007/s41027-022-00374-w

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