Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Blueprint for job creation by January-end, says Piyush Goyal

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: The government will come out with a blueprint for creating high-paying jobs for the youth as it tries to assess the job situation on the ground and fix the problems, Railway minister Piyush Goyal said on Tuesday.

The minister’s assurance of an action plan to create highpaying jobs, which will be chalked out after consultati­ons, comes amid mounting concerns over jobless growth and ahead of the general elections due in April-May.

“The government, economists and think tanks need to engage more to find more paying and quality employment opportunit­ies for the youth and how we can capture employment data more accurately,” Goyal told industry leaders at a workshop on jobs and livelihood­s organised by industry chamber, the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII). Goyal said it was important to have accurate assessment of the level of employment in the economy. “In the case of Railways, we had about 15 million people applying for 132,000 jobs. This is often touted as a data point about unemployme­nt...But, one should not be carried away by false data points, such as the number of people applying for government jobs.” The minister said while one cannot deny that a lot of people are looking for employment in the formal sector, a lot of them are already working in private sector or are self employed. “The lure of a government job in the traditiona­l Indian context is extremely huge.”

“Possibly, we can do some more engagement in other parts of the country and, by the end of January, we can come up with an actionable agenda on assessing and finding the reality on the ground and then ways to fix them.” Many entreprene­urs say they find it a challenge to get the right talent, the minister added.

Enabling job seekers to find employment appropriat­e to their qualificat­ions and collection of accurate data on employment are two key issues before the government, said human resources developmen­t minister Prakash Javadekar, who was present on the occasion.

“We have been creating jobs since liberalisa­tion. Only jobs change their nature,” said Javadekar. If India’s economy is growing fast, it was creating jobs as well, he said. “It is important to capture data on job creation.”

Economists said that declining employment elasticity—the ability of an economy to create jobs in relation to its growth rate—was not a problem specific to India, but faced by many other markets.

“Latin America, East Asia and the Middle East have shown a decline in employment elasticity, according to Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on estimates. This makes us believe India’s problem is a wage problem,” said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, group chief economic advisor, State Bank of India, who also spoke at the event.

“If employment elasticity is declining and the link with the gross domestic product is breaking down, it means the country is producing jobs but may not be quality jobs that it needs to produce. It is a global problem and India is no exception,” said Ghosh.

 ?? MINT ?? Piyush Goyal ■
MINT Piyush Goyal ■

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