Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Manufactur­ers brace for acute labour crisis

Experts said workers in the informal sector have taken a bigger hit in the 2nd wave

- Malyaban Ghosh & Kalpana Pathak

NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Manufactur­ers are bracing for an acute shortage of blue-collar workers, as the devastatin­g second wave of the pandemic spreads deeper into rural India.

Industry executives said that the second wave has instilled fear among people, and a large part of the workforce, who have left for their villages, may not return until the situation normalizes, a distant scenario given the shortage of vaccines .

“Availabili­ty of labour in April and May has always been a problem since some of them go back to their villages for farm work, but this time, the shortage will be acute since most of them are unwilling to come back to the NCR (National Capital Region) and other hubs in a hurry and lockdowns in rural areas,” said Sanjeev Vashdev, managing director, Flash Electronic­s, an auto component supplier. “So, ramping up production in the coming months might be a problem, more so for smaller manufactur­ers.”

Last year, automakers across the country faced an acute labour supply crunch after the nationwide lockdown was lifted from May. The supply situation eased only by August and September when workers started returning, aided by the fact that rural areas were relatively less impacted in the first wave. “Though lockdowns were imposed in early April in many parts of the country, we continued to purchase from our suppliers just to be ready when operations resumed. But it appears now that a labour shortage will disrupt operations if production has to be ramped up,” said Manav Kapur, executive director, Steelbird Internatio­nal, an auto parts maker.

A growing number of engineerin­g and constructi­on companies are also finding it tough to retain workers at project sites, with several states continuing to extend lockdowns. At constructi­on major Larsen & Toubro Ltd, the second wave of Covid-19 has prompted nearly 75,000 workers to leave project sites. “At the end of March, we had 245,000 labourers on our rolls. That has come down to 171,000 now. We have intensifie­d huge campaigns to tell them that they are safe at L&T. Our intense campaignin­g is working to retain labourers within our fold now,” SN Subrahmany­an, chief executive of L&T, told investors in a conference call after the fourthquar­ter earnings on May 14.

In an emailed response, L&T said it is directly engaging with the workmen by sharing communicat­ion on their personal phones via SMS’ or Whatsapp messages. Different messages specially crafted to suit the aspect of the #Safewithl&t and other relevant themes are sent twice a day.

Rohit Poddar, managing director of Poddar Housing and Developmen­t Ltd, said his company had learnt a lesson from last year’s lockdown and informed the workers in advance of the severity of the virus and limited availabili­ty of medical infrastruc­ture in their hometowns. Experts said the second wave has impacted the informal workers more as they lack job security and insurance.

“Organizati­ons, which need informal workers, have to think. This is the time when they should look at formalizin­g their workforce and can use alternativ­e forms of employment like temp staffing,” said Rituparna Chakrabort­y, co-founder and executive vice-president of Teamlease Services.

L&T and Poddar Housing and Developmen­t said they ensure full compliance of their staff and colleagues working with them. “All statutory benefits such as provident fund, ESI/ BOCW and insurance (towards accidents/employment injury) are provided to the workers,” said L&T. ESI is employee state insurance, and BOCW is Building and Other Constructi­on Workers Welfare Boards.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Industry executives said a large part of the workforce, who have left for their villages, may not return until the situation normalizes, a distant scenario given the shortage of vaccine.
REUTERS Industry executives said a large part of the workforce, who have left for their villages, may not return until the situation normalizes, a distant scenario given the shortage of vaccine.

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