India is a developing country with a lifestyle that is predominantly rural. The country's rural residents make up 65.33% of the total population. Based on the NABARD All India Rural Micro Finance Survey 2016–17, rural residents in India are struggling to meet their monthly expenses because they lack $1414, and they also have $103,000 in debt from institutional or non-institutional sources. In India, 88% of people had savings accounts. Only 23% of agricultural households with more than two hectares of land might save between $17,000 and $20,000 annually. The land-to-labor ratio has increased from 14.3 percent in the 2011 census to about 18 percent today. Agriculture is still the main source of human habitation. However, it is still unclear how to ensure the survival of migrant laborers and landless labourers in rural India. Today's rural lifestyle is determined by the suitability of all sections and classes of people with a rise in agricultural production,, per-capita, saving ability, entrepreneurial spirit, and a fair and empirical business model with government financial support, as opposed to the past when it was entirely determined by farming or agriculture. The government's financial support is vital to maintaining rural life; hitherto limited to the agricultural sector, it is now expanding to include landless workers' lives as well as improving everyone's ability to earn money and save it. The farming industry has numerous natural and man-made obstacles and is therefore unable to maintain rural culture by producing enough food, making enough money, or creating enough jobs.
Key words: financial assistance, Rural live hood, landless, saving capacity, smallholding, migrant labour,
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