The Sunday Guardian

Government increases focus on youth skill developmen­t

India has set up an ambitious target to skill over 400 million (40 crore) youths by 2022 under its Skill India Mission.

- SHAILENDRA TYAGI NEW DELHI

Scaling up the skill developmen­t capacities would gain significan­t momentum with Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Kendras that the government plans to set-up immediatel­y in every district of the country. 500 such centres would be set-up in the current financial year which, together with existing skill developmen­t ecosystem, would be capable of training over 1.5 crore youths in 2016-17. “Every district of the country would have at least one iconic, inspiratio­nal and model skill institute having a specific target to skill youths based on the standards set by National Skill Developmen­t Corporatio­n (NSDC),” says Jayant Krishna, MD & CEO, NSDC. These kendras would be a new category of skill institutes which would boost existing skilling capacities that NSDC has built-up with its partners ( mostly industries both in public and private space). Besides addressing the specific skillgaps in every district, these institutes would train youths both for manufactur­ing as well as for services sector jobs.

India has set up an ambitious target to skill over 400 million (40 crore) youths by 2022 under its Skill India Mission. In fact, “Skill India Mission is the largest hu- man resource developmen­t exercise ever undertaken by any country in the history of mankind,” says Jayant. It has trained over 1.04 crore youths last year (2015-16) which was a 37% jump from the achievemen­ts made in 2014-15. Krishna is confident of skilling over 1.5 crore this year. Since we have a mammoth target (40 crore), it would take a while to address the poor skill-ratio that India currently suffers from. Only about 4%of India’s (48 crore) workforce has taken some kind of vocational training before entering the job market.

To make this ratio look decent, the government would also set-up 5,000 new Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs) in next one year with a significan­t enhancemen­t of their skilling capabiliti­es. To make skill training aspiration­al among youths, 500 Rozgar (employment) fairs would be held across ITIs and other skill imparting verticals.

By 2025, almost one in five of the world’s working age population (18.3%) will be an Indian. To leverage jobs opportunit­ies abroad, government also plans to set-up 50 overseas employment skill training centers especially in the migratory pockets of India. The Prime Minister has also stressed on the need for proper skill mapping and identifica­tion of the future requiremen­ts for skills, so that schoolchil­dren and parents are well aware of the emerging trends in the job market. The skills imparted under the mission mostly prepare youths for the entry level jobs or for self employment opportunit­ies.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An employee of Germany’s biggest retailer Metro AG reacts to HI-4, a life-size humanoid robot, at Metro’s headquarte­rs in Duesseldor­f, Germany on Tuesday. The android, modelled after its Japanese inventor Hiroshi Ishiguro, a professor at Osaka’s...
REUTERS An employee of Germany’s biggest retailer Metro AG reacts to HI-4, a life-size humanoid robot, at Metro’s headquarte­rs in Duesseldor­f, Germany on Tuesday. The android, modelled after its Japanese inventor Hiroshi Ishiguro, a professor at Osaka’s...
 ?? IANS ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the launch of the Skill India Mission, on the occasion of the World Youth Skills Day, in New Delhi in July 2015.
IANS Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the launch of the Skill India Mission, on the occasion of the World Youth Skills Day, in New Delhi in July 2015.

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