TitleRURAL WOMEN AND THE KALAIGNAR MAGALIR URIMAI THITTAM: A STUDY ON GENDER EQUITY, FINANCIAL INCLUSION, AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT IN TAMIL NADU
Author(s)Dr.B.Indira Priyadharshini
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Abstract

Rural women in India continue to face interlocking constraints that restrict their participation in
economic activity, decision-making, asset ownership, and mobility. Although policy interventions
over the past two decades have attempted to address gendered poverty, structural inequalities persist,
particularly among low-income households dependent on informal and precarious work. In this
context, the Government of Tamil Nadu introduced the Kalaignar Magalir UrimaiThittam (KMUT)
in 2023 as a direct benefit transfer scheme providing monthly rights-based income support to eligible
women heads of households. This paper analyses the socio-economic implications of KMUT on rural
women’s livelihoods, financial autonomy, consumption stability, and bargaining power within
households. It evaluates how a feminist lens on welfare, social protection, and cash transfer policies
helps understand the transformative potential of the scheme. Based on secondary research, policy
analysis, and socio-economic theory, the paper argues that KMUT—by combining unconditional
income support with digital payment systems, targeted inclusion, and legal recognition of women as
household heads—strengthens rural women’s economic agency and contributes to inclusive
development. However, challenges related to digital literacy, last-mile delivery, socio-political
gatekeeping, and long-term fiscal sustainability require consistent policy refinement. The study
concludes that KMUT offers an innovative framework for gender-responsive welfare and can serve as
a model to improve the socio-economic resilience of rural women across India.