Livelihoods & Value-Chain Lab
Design a livelihoods intervention from the ground up — map who does what along a commodity chain, read the target group's five capitals, find the leverage points that unlock a market system, and pick the right Indian programme to invest behind.
Context & Actors
Every livelihoods programme starts with a clear picture of what is being produced, where, for whom, and who else is in the chain. Fill this in first — the later tabs build on it.
The five capitals — note the target group's asset base
Human capital
Natural capital
Physical capital
Financial capital
Actors in and around the chain
List the people and institutions who touch this commodity — producers, traders, aggregators, processors, buyers, and the support actors (banks, extension, SHGs, government line departments).
Value-Chain Map
Build the chain node by node, from raw input to the end market. For each node, name the actors, the activity they perform, and (if you know it) the approximate share of the final price captured at that stage.
Your value chain
Constraints & Leverage
A value-chain map shows the plumbing; the Making Markets Work for the Poor (M4P) lens asks why it leaks. For each node, name the binding constraint and decide whether it is a supporting-function failure or a rules / norms failure — then flag the ones that are true leverage points.
Intervention & Skills
Now design the response. Pick an intervention type, link it to a real Indian programme where one fits, note the skills gap you must close, and define how you will know it worked.
- DAY-NRLM & SHG federations — the National Rural Livelihoods Mission mobilises women into self-help groups, village organisations and cluster-level federations; the backbone for social capital and last-mile finance.
- FPOs (Farmer Producer Organisations) — member-owned aggregation and collective bargaining, supported under the central FPO promotion scheme via NABARD, SFAC and others.
- PMKVY / Skill India — the Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana and the wider Skill India mission fund short-term skilling and recognition of prior learning.
- MGNREGA — the rural employment guarantee acts as a wage floor and a safety net that de-risks the transition into new livelihoods.
Skills-gap note
What must the target group learn to move up the chain — and who will deliver it (SHG cadre, PMKVY partner, FPO staff)?
Success indicators
How will you know livelihoods improved — not just that activities happened? Add clear, verifiable indicators.
Plan ready
You've moved from context, to chain, to constraints, to a market-systems intervention. Export your plain-text livelihoods & value-chain plan and take it to the field.