Deccan Chronicle

SEEMANDHRA Fewer people look for jobs in AP

GRADUATES CAN’T FIND JOBS TO SUIT THEIR QUALIFICAT­ION

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The unemployme­nt rate in AP has declined steadily in the first three months of the year, due to job-seekers being discourage­d by unavailabi­lity of jobs postdemone­tisation.

The unemployme­nt rate recorded in AP was 5.81 in January, 4.54 in February and 3.83 in March.

In rural areas, it was 5.46, 5.01 and 2.79 in January, February and March respective­ly.

Gujarat has the lowest unemployme­nt rate, according to the monthly survey reports conducted by Bombay Stock Exchange, Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) and University of Michigan.

The BSE is collecting data from 1,58,000 households, covering 3,000 locations from all states including AP and observing the unemployme­nt rate and market sentiment.

Mahesh Vyas of CMIE said the unemployme­nt rate has seen a fall, mostly Of the 1,000 unemployed persons, 137 have graduate-level qualificat­ions and 69 per cent are jobless due to non-availabili­ty of jobs matching their education, skill and experience, according to the last report of the Labour Bureau of the Union government. due to the decrease in the number of people actively looking out for jobs. The unemployme­nt rate comprises of the people unemployed in the labour force, which is the sum of those employed and people seeking jobs actively.

People who are not seeking jobs actively are not included in the labour force when the unemployme­nt rate is calculated.

According to the survey analysis, job losses during the early months following

The Labour Bureau, for its annual survey, had conducted the survey in 295 villages and 220 urban blocks in AP.

Moreover, 133 of the 1000 unemployed are postgradua­tes and 76 per cent of them are unemployed because of the non- availabili­ty of jobs and 20 per cent because of inadequate remunerati­on. demonetisa­tion were so severe that those who lost jobs also lost hopes of finding alternativ­e jobs because there were none around.

As a result, people who dropped out of the employed labour force, dropped out of the labour force altogether at that time. The labour force is the denominato­r in the ratio of unemployme­nt rate. It is much larger than the numerator (the unemployed). As a result, when an equal amount is reduced from both the numerator and the denominato­r, the ratio (which is the unemployme­nt rate) falls.

Experts in the MSME sector and other major employment generating fields, like manufactur­ing, agreed that economic activity and also job creation has had a lull post-demonetisa­tion due to the cash crunch.

Andhra University Economics Department professor M Prasada Rao said there are different metrics to be taken into considerat­ion to find out the unemployme­nt rate, otherwise the figures do not reflect the ground reality.

“Poor labour participat­ion due to demonetisa­tion could be one of the reasons, but crop yield also plays an important role. The Kharif foodgrains production has witnessed a record high this year. This means some people could not see the need to seek jobs in this time. The method of unemployme­nt calculatio­n also makes difference,” he concluded.

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