Government's flagship  rural job guarantee scheme, MGNREGA, has led to labour shortages for the  industry resulting in increased wage costs and hampering production,  Ficci said.
The chamber, which has done a survey on the impact of the Mahatma  Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) on the industry  and the farm sector, has suggested that the scheme should be stopped  during the peak agricultural season. 
Besides, "the work done  in industrial units can also be considered for coverage under MGNREGA.  This will be particularly useful in areas where there is heavy  concentration of industrial activity," Ficci said. 
Its survey  found that the wages have risen by more than 10 per cent. Also, the  extent of "potential loss" due to labour scarcity has been pegged at 10  per cent, majority of those who participated in the survey said. 
Earlier, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar, had written to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh suggesting that the  MGNREGA scheme be suspended during the peak agricultural season. 
However, the nodal Rural Development Ministry does not seem inclined to these proposals. 
Under the Rs 40,000-crore scheme, a minimum of 100 days work is  guaranteed under law for the rural labourer at a daily rated to be fixed  by the individual states, but not less than Rs 60 per day. 
The survey drew responses from about 10 associations and over 100 firms  spread across sectors like leather, textiles, handicrafts, gems,  jewellery and construction. 
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