Splint International Journal of Professionals
  • Year: 2025
  • Volume: 12
  • Issue: 2

Social Exclusion of Street Vendors and their Problems in the Context of Globalisation

  • Author:
  • Prabhu Prasanna Behera1,*, Vijayalaxmi Mohanty2,**
  • Total Page Count: 10
  • Published Online: Oct 10, 2025
  • Page Number: 267 to 276

1Addl. Standing Counsel, Government of Odisha, Orissa High Court, Odisha, India

2Advisor to The President of India

(*Corresponding author) email id: prabhuprasanna89@gmail.com

**vijaya@srisriuniversity.edu.in

Online Published on 10 October, 2025.

Abstract

This study explores globalisation’s impact on India’s street vendors, a vulnerable informal workforce 10 million, amid economic liberalisation since the 1990s. Drawing on Kurth (1999) & Chomsky (2000), it examines how U.S.-driven institutions (IMF, WTO) disrupt traditional livelihoods, intensifying exclusion through displacement by modern retail, legal barriers, and economic marginalisation. Street vendors face systemic harassment, bribery (e.g. Rs 400 crore annually in Mumbai), and caste-based vulnerabilities, worsened by globalisation’s knowledge-technology bias. Despite the Street Vendors Act 2014, patchy implementation fails to mitigate these pressures. The research emphasises the need for inclusive policies-legal recognition, credit access, and education- to counter globalisation’s inequities, aligning with Sen’s (1999) ‘development as freedom’ framework. Secondary sources, including Bhowmik (2008) & Radhakrishnan (2006), inform this analysis of a marginalised yet vital urban population.

Keywords

Globalisation, Street vendors, Informal economy, Social exclusion