Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Self-employment is a problem, not a solution for job challenge

- Roshan Kishore roshan.k@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: To be (selling pakodas) or not to be (selling pakodas) has become the Hamletian question of sorts in the great Indian job debate. The Opposition has taken to organising protests using pakodas a saprop. The BJP is attacking those who have described it as equivalent to begging. Jokes and me mesa part, the issue at hand is worth examining.

PM Narendra Modi has often reiterated the need for Indians becoming job-creators rather than job-seekers. His speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos also dwelt on this.

Does petty self-employment, which is what setting up a pakoda stalls entails, promise a solution to India’ s employment challenge?

It is a part of the problem rather than a solution shows a statistica­l analysis. Providing quality employment rather than high unemployme­nt is the biggest challenge in India’s labour market. A comparison of unemployme­nt rates in India and OECD countries (group of developed countries) shows that it has always been much lower in India (See Chart 1).

Latest estimate puts it at around 3.6%, against OECD’s 6.1%. This seems extremely counter- intuitive at face value. If unemployme­nt in developed countries is higher, we should be witnessing reverse migrationi.e. British and German people coming to countries like India in the search of work. Why does this not happen? Unemployme­nt numbers do not tell us anything about earnings associated with jobs people are doing.

A PhD holder working as a peon or selling pakod as would be considered employed, technicall­y speaking. A 40-year-old technocrat who has stopped looking for a job after getting laid-off from an IT company would not figure in unemployme­nt calculatio­ns. This is because unemployme­nt rates are calculated on the basis of labour force which means persons working or looking for jobs, and not population.

Detailed earnings data is difficult to get to in India. But what is available paint san alarming picture. Latest National Sample Sur- vey Office estimates for 2009-10 show that even people in regular jobs earned less than ₹7,000 and ₹11,000 per month in rural and urban areas.

Earnings were much less in casual work. Among self- employed persons, the share of those who found their work remunerati­ve was below 50% and 60% in rural and urban areas respective­ly. Many among those who found their self-employment remunerati­ve could be case studies in contentmen­t with life.

The share of self-employed persons earning less than ₹3000 per month who found their earnings remunerati­ve was more than one in five in urban areas and just under half in rural areas. Such levels can hardly allow a person to lead a dignified life.

Another database which highlights the dominance of petty employment in India is the 2013 Economic Census. It shows that 45% of workers are working in economic establishm­ents which do not even employ one hired worker. This share is more than 70% in case of number of establishm­ents (See Chart 2a).

When read with the NS SO data on earnings in self-employment, this suggests that most of these people would have abysmally low earnings. A self-employed person is also unlikely to have any social security or retirement cover.

What is even more alarming is that the share of such employment has been increasing in the last two decades( See Chart 2b). This is more likely to be a result of sluggish growth in better job opportunit­ies rather than an entreprene­urial revolution in India. The fact that most poll-surveys in India list employment as the biggest issue supports such an argument.

Mushroomin­g of agitations demanding reservatio­ns by dominant cast es such as Patidars, Jats, etc, is another proof of preference for regular jobs. DalitOBC groups are pushing for reservatio­ns in private sector, indicating there aren’t enough reserved jobs in the public sector. The Opposition made sure BJP paid a big political cost for Mo han B hag wat’ s comments against reservatio­ns in 2015 Bi h ar assembly elections. It would be interestin­g to see who gains from the ongoing polemics on making a virtue out of poorly paid self-employment.

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