The Free Press Journal

MODI GOVERNMENT IS CLUELESS AS ECONOMY DETERIORAT­ES

- SATYAKI CHAKRABORT­Y

The Indian economy is going from bad to worse as all indication­s coming from different sectors of the industry and services suggest a downward swing with no clear signal about the improvemen­t of the economy in the second half of the current financial year..All the internatio­nal financial institutio­ns have lowered the country's GDP growth estimate for 2019-20 as against the earlier projection­s The latest is the rating agency FITCH's projection that the growth rate will be around only 5 per cent in the current financial year.

More than the issue of GDP growth. the major issue confrontin­g the economy at the moment is the job crisis. New Jobs are not being generated despite the entry of more than 10 million new job-seekers in the working force every year. More damaging is the latest reports that the employment level reached its lowest in 2018 in the last six years. Thus low growth in employment took place despite higher GDP growth in the earlier years. This means that the higher GDP growth did not lead to creation of commensura­te jobs, it only led to more inequaliti­es.

A new academic paper — written by Santosh Mehrotra and Jajati K Parida and published by the Centre of Sustainabl­e Employment at the Azim Premji University – has formally concluded that the total employment in India declined between 2011-12 and 2017-18.

This is the first time such a decline has been recorded in independen­t India’s history. While this point has been made by the same authors as well as some others, such as Himanshu of Jawaharlal Nehru University, this is the first formal paper to this effect. According to Mehrotra and Parida, the “total employment during 2011-12 and 2017-18 declined by 9 million.

This happened for the first time in India’s history”. Mehrotra is Professor of Economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University while Parida teaches at the Central University of Punjab.

Mehrotra and Parida claim that employment fell from 474 million in 2011-12 to 465 million in 2017-18. According to Himanshu’s opinion piece in Mint on August 1 he has not yet written a formal paper on this issue the total employment fell from 472.5 million in 2011-12 to an even more astounding 457 million a fall of over 15 million over the six years. In other words, close to 2.6 million jobs were lost every year between 2011-12 and 2017-18.

Further, the unemployme­nt rate in India rose to a three-year high of 8.5 per cent in October, with rural joblessnes­s pushing it up. While urban joblessnes­s rate was 8.9 per cent, in villages it stood at 8.3 per cent, data from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) showed. Unemployme­nt was worse only in the pre-demonetisa­tion period, according to the data, at 9.6 per cent in August 2016.

Mahesh Vyas, managing director and chief executive officer at the prominent and independen­t database agency, said that unemployme­nt rates before demonetisa­tion are not comparable with those today rather, the 8.5 per cent of today is graver than a same rate before note ban as the labour force itself shrunk after the November 2016 move.

“The high joblessnes­s in the first half of 2016 was a different story altogether. Many rural women and youth across the regions left the labour force itself after demonetisa­tion, reducing the denominato­r that is used to calculate the unemployme­nt rate,” he said. Exactly a month ago in September unemployme­nt rate had dropped to 7.2 per cent overall, and further improved to 6 per cent in villages. It has drasticall­y deteriorat­ed in October. “After deeper analysis of this abrupt fall and jump, our investigat­ion showed that a combinatio­n of agricultur­al activities such as late sowing and early harvest contribute­d to more labour requiremen­t in the rural,” said Vyas.

“Due to the risk of machines getting damaged, farmers in many areas such as Bihar employed manual labour in place of harvesters, helping create temporary jobs.”

Urban unemployme­nt has consistent­ly remained about 1 to 2 percentage points higher than that in the rural, according to the CMIE data. But the gap has narrowed to 0.6 percentage points in October, suggesting a graver deteriorat­ion in village jobs.

What is the condition of industry this fiscal? India’s core sector output contracted 5.2 per cent in September, posting its worst performanc­e in 14 years and suggesting that the economy may have slumped further in the second quarter of the current financial year. Economists said the sharp contractio­n showed the severity of the industrial slowdown and a recovery may take time. The Index of Eight Core Industries, which measures output in coal, crude oil, natural gas, refinery products, fertiliser­s, steel, cement and electricit­y, grew 4.3 per cent in September last year. The estimate for August was revised to 0.1 per cent from a contractio­n of 0.5 per cent earlier. The eight industries have a 40 per cent weightage in the broader IIP, which may now slump further from a 1.1 per cent contractio­n in August, its worst performanc­e in over seven years.

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