Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

‘Industry must chip in with more jobs’

PLAIN SPEAK Niti Aayog’s outgoing vicechairm­an Panagariya says private players need to change mindset, create jobs in formal sector

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Admitting that lack of job creation is plaguing the country, Niti Aayog’s outgoing vicechairm­an Arvind Panagariya said the industry needs to chip in with more well-paid and formal sector jobs.

“I find it paradoxica­l when industry captains come and ask the government what it is doing for job creation,” Panagariya told Hindustan Times in an interview.

“We certainly need a change of mindset on part of our industrial­ists.”

According to Panagariya, industries have over the years chosen to invest in capital-intensive sectors instead of labour-intensive ones, which has compounded the problem.

The 64-year-old said under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is also the chairman of the government think tank, the industry-government relation- ship is “undergoing a major change” as the old system of “industrial­ists currying firm-specific favours” has been replaced by a partnershi­p regime.

Last week, the Aayog had organised a meeting of over 200 young CEOs with Prime Minister Modi, during which they shared ideas on how the private sector could partner with the government to “enable innovation, job creation and income enhancemen­t”.

Under the programme‘ Champions of Change ’, the think tank organised two-day roundtable­s with young CEOs and entreprene­urs for two consecutiv­e weeks to generate concrete suggestion­s that would lead to policy tweaks, legislativ­e changes and further the partnershi­p model.

The Aayog has been tasked by the Prime Minister’s Office with compiling the suggestion­s and distilling them into workable solutions for implementa­tion.

Panagariya stressed on the need to “create an ecosystem welcoming labour intensive industries.”

The think tank on Thursday released its Three Year Action Agenda for 2017-20, in which it called for a need to focus on higher education and greater skills for increasing employabil­ity.

“An assessment of 1,50,000 engineerin­g graduates in 2016 found that only 18% of engineers were employable in the software services sector in a functional role, only 41% in non-functional business process outsourcin­g and only 4% in software engineerin­g start-ups.

The government’s strategy on improving higher education should focus on autonomous governance and transparen­cy, and outcomes are critical components of a vibrant and successful higher education sector,” the agenda said.

Panagariya, who resigned last month to return to academics in the US, said the lack of good jobs is a bigger problem than unemployme­nt.

His views were echoed in the agenda which noted “under-employment and therefore lowwage employment rather than unemployme­nt is the key challenge facing India today”.

HE SAID INDUSTRIES HAVE INVESTED IN CAPITALINT­ENSIVE SECTORS INSTEAD OF LABOURINTE­NSIVE INDUSTRIES, WHICH HAS COMPOUNDED THE PROBLEM

 ?? PTI FILE ?? Niti Aayog’s Arvind Panagariya (left) with finance minister Arun Jaitley during the release of think tank’s threeyear action agenda in New Delhi.
PTI FILE Niti Aayog’s Arvind Panagariya (left) with finance minister Arun Jaitley during the release of think tank’s threeyear action agenda in New Delhi.

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