Paid an honorarium, not a wage
India's child-nutrition and rural-health systems run on the labour of roughly 34 lakh women. The central government pays them an "honorarium" — not a salary — of ₹4,500 a month or less, below the national floor wage. Calling the work voluntary is what keeps it that cheap.
Every Anganwadi centre that weighs a baby, feeds a toddler, or counsels a pregnant woman is staffed by an Anganwadi worker and a helper. Every village that gets a community health visit has an ASHA. Together these two cadres — roughly 23.7 lakh Anganwadi workers and helpers, and around 10 lakh ASHAs — are the human infrastructure of India's nutrition and primary-health systems. Almost all of them are women.
They are not, in the government's accounting, employees. They are "honorary workers" who "voluntarily come forward," and what they receive is an honorarium. That single word does a lot of work: it is the reason the pay can sit below the minimum wage.
An Anganwadi worker's central honorarium is ₹4,500 a month — below the national floor wage, and about a fifth of the ₹20,000-odd a month that the central minimum wage implies for unskilled work. A helper gets ₹2,250. ASHAs have no fixed salary at all. The central amounts have not moved since 2018 — even after the Supreme Court held, in 2022, that this "honorarium" is in fact wages.
An honorarium under the minimum wage
Set the honorarium against the wage benchmarks and the framing does its job in plain sight. The national floor-level minimum wage — an advisory level states are not supposed to undercut — works out to roughly ₹4,600 a month for full-time work. An Anganwadi worker's ₹4,500 sits just under it; a helper's ₹2,250 is about half. Against the central government's own minimum wage for unskilled work — around ₹20,000 a month with allowances — the worker's honorarium is barely a fifth.
View data table
| Monthly amount | Rupees |
|---|---|
| Anganwadi helper (honorarium) | 2,250 |
| Anganwadi worker (honorarium) | 4,500 |
| National floor wage (≈26 days) | 4,628 |
| Central unskilled minimum wage (with VDA) | 20,358 |
ASHAs are paid differently and, in a sense, worse: they have no fixed salary at all. They receive a small fixed monthly incentive (₹2,000) plus piece-rate payments for specific tasks — an institutional delivery here, an immunisation session there — so a month's earnings swing with the work available and the state they are in. In 2022 the World Health Organization gave India's ASHAs a Global Health Leaders Award; workers noted that an award does not pay a wage.
Same job, very different pay
The central honorarium is a floor, and states top it up — by wildly different amounts. Where the Centre pays ₹4,500 to an Anganwadi worker, a handful of states lift the total to three or four times that. The result is that what the identical job pays depends mostly on which state you do it in.
View data table
| State (reported total) | Rupees / month |
|---|---|
| Tamil Nadu | ~18,000 |
| Kerala | ~17,000 |
| Telangana | ~13,000 |
| Karnataka | ~12,000 |
| Andhra Pradesh | ~12,000 |
| Central honorarium (everywhere) | 4,500 |
What this data can and can't tell you
- "Voluntary" is a legal device, not a description. These schemes run on executive orders, not labour statutes, which is what lets the state pay an honorarium instead of a wage. In 2022 the Supreme Court held that Anganwadi workers are employees and their honorarium is wages, entitling them to gratuity — the label and the law already disagree.
- Hours are contested, so hourly rates are estimates. The roles are officially "part-time," but unions and field studies document full days. Any implied hourly figure depends on the hours you assume — state the assumption rather than quoting a single number.
- The minimum-wage benchmark moves. The ~₹20,000 central unskilled wage is revised twice a year with dearness allowance; the ~22% ratio is a snapshot, not a fixed fact.
- State top-ups are reported, not audited here. The state totals come from public compilations and shift with state budgets; the one hard number is the ₹4,500 central floor that is identical everywhere.
- Don't confuse this with the value of unpaid care. Wide estimates that care work is worth 15–40% of GDP describe unpaid domestic work, not this paid-but-underpaid cadre. They frame the undervaluation; they don't price these workers.
The claim the data supports: India delivers nutrition and primary health to hundreds of millions through ~34 lakh women it pays below its own wage floor, on amounts frozen since 2018 — a cost structure that depends on calling the work "voluntary" even after the courts called it employment.
- Ministry of Women & Child Development — worker counts and honorarium amounts (2024); 2018 revision.
- Supreme Court of India, Maniben Maganbhai Bhariya v. District Development Officer (2022) — honorarium as wages, gratuity for Anganwadi workers (via Scroll).
- World Health Organization — ASHA cadre size and recognition (2022); Ministry of Labour & Employment — minimum-wage benchmarks.
ImpactMojo Data (2026). "Paid an honorarium, not a wage." ImpactMojo Data Dives. Retrieved from https://impactmojo.in/DataDives/honorarium-not-a-wage.html
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