Which brings us to the question of… what next? When things get back to normal, will the reverse-migration happen and people throng on trains to get back? To be honest, nobody really knows. Some argue that cold economics will ensure migrants come back. “Most inter-state migrants ran away from economic wastelands; their remittances were an important source of income, self-esteem and respect. Necessity will drive them in search of work once again.” – Manish Sabharwal and Sabina Dewan Others are less optimistic. “India’s heartless capitalists deserve the labour shortages they are about to be hit with … when they try to finish those half-built buildings, or switch on the machines in the factories.” – Shivam Vij What I think will happen is partially optimistic, partially practical. Many, if not most, are likely to return to cities to earn and fend for their families. Now for the optimistic part, and it might not make some shareholders very comfortable. Some migrants will realise that city life is not all it’s made out to be. Heck, if you and I can complain about Mumbai, what of those living in slums? Squalid living conditions, high cost, unbearable pollution, and importantly – the incredibly low level of respect they get. Is it any wonder that they believe cities treat them like “stray dogs”? Time and again over the last few months, we learn of how migrants are not looking for handouts; they’re looking for dignity. “We have to depend on charity for survival, there is no dignity in living like this”, says one, desperate to leave Mumbai and not have to depend on other people. Some will now realise that, at the risk of lowering their incomes, they might as well ply their trade closer to home. What we might end up seeing is rural areas, or at least cities close to them benefiting. If another pandemic breaks out, at least the return back home will be less horrific. Which then gives us another benefit: potentially increased wages, and for this we have historical precedent in the Black Death of 14th-century Europe. The subsequent labour shortage meant a rise in wages. While we might not see as drastic a shift, I do believe labourers have more of a bargaining chip, and will need to be offered more to coax them out of villages, at least till the sceptre of the virus still hangs around.Indian cities run on cheap labour.
This is not a bad thing at all. Raising wages for the poor is the best thing that could happen to a capitalist system, giving a wider base of potential customers to companies, and less money idly accumulating interest for the few wealthy. In India, few things are more in need of fixing than dignity of labour. Becoming a superpower or $5 trillion economy will remain just propaganda until then. Imagine, for instance, a Mumbai where everyone led a life of dignity, had access to public spaces, could walk into a mall and possibly buy something, and had a semblance of privacy. There are several complications. We haven’t even touched on the question of caste, for instance. But I remain optimistic that something good will eventually come out of this, even if it’s only because urban India will realise that it’s fucked without the low-wage labour which it’s so badly mistreated, now in full view for all the world to see.Raising wages for the poor is the best thing that could happen to a capitalist system.

