Muscat Daily

World's fastest-growing economy isn't creating jobs like before

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New Delhi, India - In India, the world’s fastest-expanding economy, the link between growth and job creation is weakening.

New research from the privately-run Azim Premji University shows that a growth rate of seven per cent is now leading to less than one per cent improvemen­t in employment, while in the 1970s and ’80s an expansion of three per cent to four per cent was resulting in a much higher two per cent gain in jobs. The outcome is an unemployme­nt rate that’s hit five per cent in 2015, the highest in at least 20 years.

The main reason for the worsening correlatio­n between growth and jobs was a mismatch between skills and ‘good jobs’, according to researcher­s led by Amit Basole. The share of the socalled goods jobs that broadly includes formal employment with regular pay accounted for only 17 per cent of the country’s 467mn workforce.

‘Simply put, higher growth has raised aspiration­s but has failed to generate the kind of jobs that will allow people to fulfill those aspiration­s’, the researcher­s wrote in the report, called State of Working India 2018. ‘This obviously points to the issue being not only one of job creation, but of the creation of decent and desirable jobs’.

The most recent figures show gross domestic product expanded 8.2 per cent in the three months through June from a year earlier, making India the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

India is on track to hold that position, with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund retaining its growth forecast of 7.3 per cent for the fiscal year through March 2019.

Still, unemployme­nt remains high, especially among young and educated Indians. More than one-third of about 23mn people who were actively searching for jobs have graduate or higher levels of education, the study found.

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