Till the 2020 lockdown, the mainstream economic narrative in India used to be that of the fastest-growing economy of the world. The reverse migration of Sheetal, Jagat and millions like them exposed the deepest fault lines of that narrative. On 22 March 2020, when middle-class India was busy banging utensils, migrants had already started crowding bus terminuses and railway stations. Still, nobody could imagine the extent of this crisis. Amidst multiple and often conflicting government orders, terrible road and train accidents and police highhandedness, a devastating human tragedy played out. The government paid no heed as millions of people took the highways in absolute desperation, at times to walk back 1,500 kilometres or more.
Even at a conservative estimate of around 3 crores, this was the largest internal migration in recent human history. If migration was India’s largest poverty alleviation programme, then this reverse migration was definitely the single biggest burst of unemployment in post-reform India.