Women-Led Development: India’s Lifecycle Approach to Empowerment
(Source – PIB Editorial)
Topic: GS-2 (Women Empowerment), GS-2 (Social Justice), GS-3 (Inclusive Growth)
Context
The editorial highlights India’s transition from traditional welfare-oriented schemes to a lifecycle-based women empowerment framework. It argues that policy interventions now cover every stage of a woman’s life—from birth and education to entrepreneurship, leadership, and political participation.
Core Argument
India is gradually shifting from a model of “women’s welfare” to “women-led development” by creating an ecosystem that promotes dignity, education, economic participation, safety, and leadership opportunities throughout a woman’s lifecycle.
Dignity at Birth
Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (BBBP)
Launched: 22 January 2015
Objectives:
• Improve Child Sex Ratio (CSR)
• Prevent gender-biased sex selection
• Promote girls’ education
Impact:
• NFHS-5 reports sex ratio of 1020 females per 1000 males
• Significant improvement from 943 in Census 2011
Maternal Welfare Measures
Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana (PMMVY)
Provides:
• ₹5,000 for first child
• ₹6,000 for second child (girl child)
Benefits:
• Compensates wage loss
• Promotes institutional care
• Encourages immunization
Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan (PMSMA)
Provides:
• Free antenatal care on the 9th of every month
Achievements:
• 6.85 crore check-ups
• 1.03 crore high-risk pregnancies identified
Supporting Schemes
• Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY)
• Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram (JSSK)
Result:
• Institutional deliveries increased to 90.6%
Education and Aspirational Growth
School Infrastructure
Under Samagra Shiksha:
• 97.3% schools have separate girls’ toilets
• 99.3% schools have drinking water facilities
Impact:
• Improved retention of girl students
• Reduction in dropout rates
Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas (KGBVs)
• 5,316 residential schools for girls from disadvantaged communities
Promoting STEM Education
Vigyan Jyoti Scheme
Objectives:
• Encourage girls in STEM fields
• Provide mentoring and laboratory exposure
Coverage:
• 1.12 lakh girls
• 300 districts
Higher Education
Special provisions in:
• IITs
• NITs
Result:
• Female participation crossed 20%
Skill Development
Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY)
• Women constitute nearly 45% of trainees
NAVYA Initiative
Focus Areas:
• Artificial Intelligence
• Cybersecurity
• Green Energy
• Emerging technologies
Financial Inclusion and Entrepreneurship
Self-Help Group (SHG) Revolution
DAY-NRLM
Achievements:
• Presence in 7,627 blocks
• Institutional credit of ₹12.18 lakh crore
Support Network:
• Bank Sakhis
• Krishi Sakhis
Lakhpati Didi Mission
Coverage:
• 10.07 crore women
• 93.85 lakh SHGs
Objective:
• Enable 6 crore women to earn ₹1 lakh annually
Access to Credit
Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY)
Credit disbursed:
• ₹40.07 lakh crore
Benefits:
• Supports women-led micro-enterprises
Stand-Up India
Provides:
• Loans from ₹10 lakh to ₹1 crore
Technology-Based Livelihoods
NaMo Drone Didi Yojana
Provides:
• Drone pilot training
• Agricultural drones for SHGs
Benefits:
• Higher productivity
• New income opportunities
Market Access
Womaniya Initiative (GeM)
Benefits:
• Direct government procurement from women entrepreneurs
Achievement:
• ₹28,000 crore worth procurement in FY 2025-26
SHE-Mart Network
Objective:
• Community-owned retail platforms for women artisans
Coverage Target:
• 1 crore women artisans
Safety and Public Health
Mission Shakti
Two Components:
- Sambal (Safety)
- Samarthya (Empowerment)
Sambal
Includes:
• 973 One Stop Centres
• 181 Women Helpline
• 112 Emergency Response System
Achievements:
• Assistance to 14.49 lakh women
Samarthya
Provides:
• Shakti Sadans
• Sakhi Niwas
• Palna Creches
Universal Health Protection
Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY
Achievements:
• 21 crore women beneficiaries
• 48% of total admissions
Ayushman Arogya Mandirs
Coverage:
• 1.84 lakh centres
Special Focus:
• Cervical cancer screening
• Preventive healthcare
Quality-of-Life Infrastructure
Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY)
Achievement:
• 10.55 crore LPG connections
Impact:
• Reduced indoor air pollution
• Improved women’s health
Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM)
Achievement:
• Tap water to 15.84 crore households
Impact:
• Reduced drudgery
• Improved health outcomes
Political Empowerment
| Sector | Achievement | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Panchayati Raj | 14.5 lakh elected women representatives | 46% representation |
| Electoral Participation | 47 crore women voters | 48.62% electorate |
| Legislature | Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam | 33% reservation |
| Armed Forces | First NDA women cadets graduated | Greater gender inclusion |
Key Challenges
Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR)
Challenges:
• Care burden
• Safety concerns
• Informal employment
Micro-Enterprise Growth Constraints
Issues:
• Difficulty moving from micro to medium enterprises
• Limited access to growth capital
• Weak market linkages
Digital Divide
Particularly severe in:
• Tribal regions
• Hilly areas
• Remote rural locations
Consequences:
• Limited digital literacy
• Dependence on intermediaries
Way Forward
FPO-SHG Integration
• Link SHGs with Farmer Producer Organisations
• Promote value addition and market access
Expand Palna Creches
• Reduce unpaid care burden
• Improve workforce participation
Women-Focused Venture Capital
• Dedicated funding through SIDBI and other institutions
• Encourage women-led deep-tech startups
Localized Digital Literacy
• Expand NAVYA nationwide
• Promote safe digital finance and entrepreneurship
UPSC Value Addition
Key Concepts
Women-Led Development
A development model where women are not merely beneficiaries but active drivers of economic growth and governance.
Lifecycle Approach
Policy intervention covering:
Birth → Education → Skill Development → Employment → Entrepreneurship → Leadership
Major Government Initiatives
• BBBP
• PMMVY
• PMSMA
• PMKVY
• DAY-NRLM
• Lakhpati Didi
• NaMo Drone Didi
• Mission Shakti
• PMUY
• Jal Jeevan Mission
• Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam
Conclusion
India’s women empowerment framework is increasingly moving beyond welfare support toward creating economic, social, and political agency. The success of this transition will depend on addressing labour-force participation gaps, digital inequalities, and enterprise growth constraints while continuing to invest in education, skills, safety, and leadership opportunities.
Memorable Line:
“True empowerment begins when women move from being beneficiaries of development to becoming architects of development.”