Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Rural unemployme­nt inches up, urban figure dips slightly

JOBS DATA Total unemployme­nt rate climbs to 7.94% in the week ended July 19 from 7.44%

- Prashant K Nanda

NEW DELHI: India’s rural unemployme­nt rate has started moving upward, with the summer crop sowing season drawing to an end.

The rural unemployme­nt rate climbed to 7.1% in the week ended July 19 from 6.34% recorded in the previous week, according to fresh data from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE).

This is still below the figure for the week before India went into a lockdown on March 25, but economists feel it will see a gradual climb in the coming weeks, and July may not see job creation picking up much.

Overall national unemployme­nt also inched up to 7.94% in the week ended July 19 from 7.44% the previous week. However, urban unemployme­nt remains the bigger concern, as it continues to stay high and its decline has been slower.

The urban joblessnes­s rate came down marginally to 9.78% from 9.92% during the same time period, according to CMIE, reflecting the stubborn formal sector jobs space that is directly influenced by the existing business environmen­t, which is improving very slowly.

Economists and experts said the labour market will see a tougher challenge over the next couple of months both in the rural areas and in urban pockets. In rural India, the sowing season is nearing an end. Monsoon is expected to pick up in parts of India, bringing along with it natural calamities such as floods, which will restrict activities in the agricultur­e sector and partially limit low-end self-employment avenues.

In urban areas witnessing sporadic lockdowns, the slow reopening of businesses will limit the faster recovery that the country saw in June.

“The sowing season is nearing completion and the strain in the rural labour market will be visible in the coming weeks. The

Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) is helpful but may not be able to take pressure off and absorb all the people during the rainy season, who were earlier largely deployed in agricultur­al activities,” said Arup Mitra, a professor of economics at the Institute of Economic Growth in New Delhi.

CMIE data shows that rural employment scenario is much better in recent weeks, but “we must take note that a higher labour force participat­ion rate in agricultur­e means only a marginal growth in productivi­ty of labour. Immediate income growth is not there,” Mitra said.

The Centre and the states must devise a strategy for the growth of non-farm sector in rural India which can help absorb people in decent jobs, he said. The slow recovery of businesses and the urge to cut cost by employers for survival has a direct impact on employment, Mitra contended.

GN Jha, a farmer from Purnia in Bihar, agreed. “Farmers with a good land holding are doing fine, but people who don’t have enough land or working as daily wagers are in real trouble. The lack of cash in hand is a problem, and this will prompt people to go back to urban areas again despite the bad living conditions there. This is where non-farm activities and white-collar jobs in regional level will be of help,” Jha said.

MUMBAI: The Uday Kotak-led board of directors of Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS) has been able to resolve only 18% of the company’s outstandin­g debt of more than ₹1 lakh crore, nearly two years after taking control of the bankrupt shadow banker and constructi­on firm.

The bulk of the resolution had been expected to be complete by March 2020, but the board said that there were legal and regulatory delays and Covid-19 has slowed down resolution further.

The board set a new resolution timeline and said it will be able to resolve ₹50,590 crore of outstandin­g debt by March 2021 and a further ₹6,650 crore in FY22.

The expected resolution proceeds total ₹57,240 crore, amounting to 57% of debt outstandin­g. “The revised value accounts for more than 57% of the overall debt and is significan­tly higher than the average realisatio­n, till date, for financial creditors under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code process,” it said in a press release.

 ?? PTI ?? The monsoon is expected to restrict agricultur­al activities in the rural sector.
PTI The monsoon is expected to restrict agricultur­al activities in the rural sector.

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