Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Covid will force 18 mn to find new jobs by ’30’

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

REMOTE WORK IS HERE TO STAY, THERE WILL BE A DECLINE IN BIZ TRAVEL AND AUTOMATION WILL SEE AN UPTICK,

THE REPORT SAID

MUMBAI: Covid-19 will have a lasting impact on labour markets, and as much as 18 million Indian workers will be forced to switch to a newer occupation by 2030 because of the pandemic, a report said on Friday.

The impact will be “disproport­ionately” felt on low-wage workers in retail, food services, hospitalit­y, and office administra­tion, the report by Mckinsey Global Institute, a think-tank, said.

The pandemic has disrupted labour markets because companies have been forced to respond to a new dimension of work physical proximity, an official statement explained.

The report identifies the lasting impact of Covid-19 on labour demand, the mix of occupation­s, and workforce skills required in eight countries including India.

Three broad changes in consumer behaviour and business models will persist to varying degrees because of the pandemic which include the rise of remote work, the increased embrace of e-commerce and virtual interactio­ns, and the more rapid deployment of automation and AI (artificial intelligen­ce), it said.

This will lead to a reshufflin­g of jobs in the economy over a decade, and over 100 million workers will have to find a new job, it said, adding 18 million of those will be in India itself.

The impact on India has been minimized because between 35-55% of the country’s workforce depends on what was classified as the outdoor production and maintenanc­e arena, which includes constructi­on sites, farms, residentia­l and commercial grounds, and other outdoor spaces. In India, the share of total work hours expended using physical and manual skills will decline by 2.2 percentage points, while time devoted to technologi­cal skills will rise 3.3 percentage points, it said.

“The long-term effects of the virus may reduce the number of low-wage jobs available, which previously served as a safety net for displaced workers,” Susan Lund, a partner at Mckinsey Global Institute (MGI), said.

These workers will need to prepare themselves to find work in occupation­s with higher wages that require more complex skills, such as jobs in health care, technology, teaching and training, social work, and human resources, Lund added.

In the future, remote work is here to stay, there will be a decline in business travel, gig work is set to expand, and automation will see an uptick, the report said. “The pandemic will make the reskilling challenge more daunting. Its effects will fall heaviest on the most vulnerable workers,” Anu Madgavkar, also a partner at MGI, said.

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