Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Supporting the unemployed

Job losses are rising across the board. The State needs to help

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India was in the middle of an economic slowdown before the pandemic. With the coronaviru­s, and the national lockdown imposed to curb its spread, the slowdown has potentiall­y turned into a recession. The government’s announceme­nt of ₹20 lakh crore package is an acknowledg­ment of the crisis at hand. One key way in which this crisis is getting reflected is in the unemployme­nt figures. Even before the pandemic, India was staring at relatively high unemployme­nt — an official report indicated a 6% unemployme­nt rate in 2017-18, the highest in 45 years. Over 12 million people enter the workforce every year, and India has struggled to create new jobs. This trend has now got accelerate­d. According to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), the unemployme­nt rate was 24% in the week ending May 17. Its April data shows that it was predominan­tly small traders and labourers, followed by entreprene­urs, and then salaried employees who lost their jobs. This is not surprising. If factories and shops are closed, if daily wage labourers and street vendors can’t work, if companies begin losing revenues drasticall­y, there will be job losses. The problem is that the easing of the lockdown will not immediatel­y restore these jobs.

That is why a key component of any relief package has to take into account this rising unemployme­nt. By pumping in an additional ₹40,000 crore into the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), the government is hoping to create a financial buffer for those who have returned home to their villages. And by unveiling structural reforms, it hopes to get the economy kickstarte­d. But this will not solve the immediate crisis — where people, in the absence of jobs, don’t have incomes, which, in turn, makes basic livelihood difficult. The poor will get most severely affected, but so will large sections of the middle class who are staring at salary cuts or job losses, which will reduce their purchasing power and ability to take and pay loans sharply. This, in turn, will have an impact across a range of sectors. Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said that she is open to suggestion­s and, as the year progresses, there will be more measures. India will have to look more carefully at both the United States, which is offering a generous unemployme­nt allowance, and the United Kingdom, which has offered wage support to workers. There will be issues of resources, and identifyin­g and targeting beneficiar­ies. But India may, sooner than later, need to introduce an unemployme­nt allowance to help citizens overcome this crisis.

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