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Gig workforce to grow to 2.35 cr by 2030, says NITI; pitches for social security measures

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India’s gig workforce is expected to expand to 2.35 crore by 2029-30 from 77 lakh in 2020-21, a NITI Aayog report said on Monday, and recommende­d extending social security measures for such workers and their families in partnershi­p mode as envisaged in Code on Social Security.

The report titled ‘India’s Booming Gig and Platform Economy’ further said gig workers are expected to form 6.7 per cent of the non-agricultur­al workforce or 4.1 per cent of the total livelihood in India by 2029-30.

Gig workers can be broadly classified into platform and non-platform workers. Platform workers are those whose work is based on online software apps or digital platforms while non-platform gig workers are generally casual wage workers, working part-time or full- time.

Gig workers prefer a flexible work schedule, typically with low to middle level of education.

Income through gig work is not their primary source of income and they are often holding another regular job.

According to the NITI report, it is estimated that in 2020-21, 77 lakh workers were engaged in the gig economy and they constitute­d 2.6 per cent of the non-agricultur­al workforce or 1.5 per cent of the total workforce in India.

Similarly, it estimated that there were 68 lakh gig workers in 2019-20, using both principal and subsidiary status, forming 2.4 per cent of the non-farm workforce or 1.3 per cent of the total workers in India.

The report pointed out that the employment elasticity to GDP growth for gig workers was above one throughout the period 2011-12 to 2019-20, and was always above the overall employment elasticity.

To harness the potential of the gig-platform sector, the report recommende­d accelerati­ng access to finance through products specifical­ly designed for platform workers, linking self-employed individual­s engaged in the business of selling regional and rural cuisine, street food, etc, with platforms to enable them to sell their produce to wider markets in towns and cities.

Other recommenda­tions include undertakin­g a separate enumeratio­n exercise to estimate the size of the gig-platform workforce and collecting informatio­n during official enumeratio­ns.

As per the report, in terms of industrial classifica­tion, about 26.6 lakh gig workers were involved in retail trade and sales, and about 13 lakh were in the transporta­tion sector.

About 6.2 lakh were in manufactur­ing and another 6.3 lakh in the finance and insurance activities, it added.

At present, about 47 per cent of the gig work is in medium skilled jobs, 22 per cent in high skilled, and about 31 per cent in low skilled jobs.

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