Case Study

Livelihood Promotion through Income Generation - A Case Study of Maa Tarini Mahila Samiti

Alternatives to traditional methods of income generation
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This paper describes the success of the self help group (SHG), Maa Taarini Mahila Samiti, founded in a backward village of Orissa, India, with the encouragement of the Gramin Vikas Trust.

The village had the following features:

  • Main occupation was agriculture, followed by wage labor;
  • Cultivation was rain dependant;
  • Irrigation facilities were insufficient;
  • Modern technology was absent;
  • Productivity, income and asset base were low;
  • Capital was lacking.

The SHG had the following features:

  • 12 women members, 10 of whom were married;
  • Homogeneous caste and class structures;
  • High level of literacy.

The group functioned as follows:

  • Members met every month for a meeting;
  • Each member saved Rs. 10 monthly;
  • Defaulters were fined;
  • The group linked up with the Bank of India.

The group took up the following alternative livelihood options:

  • Diversified from traditional agriculture to sabai grass cultivation;
  • Made ropes from the grass;
  • Entered into the livestock business;
  • Started bamboo plantations;
  • Used the agricultural equipment given to them by Gramin vikas Trust to earn more income.

The paper concludes by listing the group's achievements:

  • Enhanced self-reliance;
  • Creative use of locally available resources;
  • Increased ability of the SHG and Gramin Vikas Trust to work together;
  • Strengthening of institutional capacity through training.

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