Apart from the scale of migration, what makes this debate significant is the 'sons-of-the-soil' demand being voiced in some parts of the country and violent attacks on migrants in others, notably in Maharashtra where north Indians have been selectively targeted. The UNESCO report, however, views outsiders as catalysts in economic development and key factors behind prosperity of many cities. It maintains that migrants do not "steal" opportunities from locals, given that most of them do menial and dangerous jobs which most others are unwilling to touch. Migrants contribute 10 per cent of GDP; they send remittances back home of between Rs 70,000 crore and Rs 120,000 crore. There are odd fiscal and federal implications to this. The tax revenue generated from the utilisation of these remittances in procuring consumer goods and services goes to the recipient states, instead of where these funds are generated.
Interestingly, metro towns are no longer the preferred destinations; Tier-II and Tier-III towns are, along with agriculturally progressive states that offer lucrative, even if seasonal, employment. Many relatively smaller towns now have larger proportions of outsiders than Mumbai and Delhi, where they form some 43 per cent of the population. Surat, Ludhiana, Faridabad and Nashik are all more than half migrant. Yet, as migrants are frequently invisible to the Indian state, the fiscal bases of these cities are not commensurately beefed up; and thus civic amenities are not created that take into account this new reality. Politicians and town planners responsible for providing civic amenities formulate policies inimical to migration. As both cause and consequence, many migrants are denied access to public services, social protection and even political participation for want of formal residency rights and identity proof. This is a crucial direction for policy once the Aadhaar-based unique identity numbers become widely available, and give people biometrically established, and not residency-based, identity. But a change in outlook is also essential. India may live still in its villages, but its soul is migrating to its towns.
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