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Child labor problem plagues India

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NEW DELHI — Seventy years ago last week, India gained independen­ce. The country has since created one of the world’s largest economies. But despite its wealth, 33 million children ages 5 to 18 are working — and almost one third of this group are younger than 15 according to Save the Children India, making India home to one of the highest concentrat­ions of child workers in the world.

Economic theory suggests that child labor would be all but eradicated by growth and developmen­t. But after some successful efforts to increase the number of children in school and to rehabilita­te former child workers, the national effort to eliminate the practice is losing momentum and child labor in major cities has increased significan­tly, according to interviews with more than a dozen child rights groups, academics and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

“People have dropped the ball,” said Joachim Theis, UNICEF India’s child protection chief from 2013 to 2016. Child labor “is being seen as something which is too difficult” to stop.

Since the election of progrowth Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2014, India has implemente­d ambitious reforms aimed at deregulati­ng and growing its economy. Under his watch, the country at one point overtook China as the world’s fastest growing economy (although it ceded that position earlier this year), and is predicted to average an impressive real GDP growth of 7.4 percent this year and next, says a report this month Deutsche Bank.

But the nation’s developmen­t has been segmented, and much of it has not affected the areas of the economy where children tend to work. “India’s GDP and growth is largely oriented around a highly educated and highly skilled workforce,” said Rajeev Dehejia, professor of public policy at New York University. “This is paradoxica­l for an economy where most people have a low level of education.”

Conversely, most child labor is concentrat­ed away from the skilled economy, in the informal sector that makes up about 90 percent of India’s workforce and half of its GDP, according to Credit Suisse estimates. Here, children are not subject to government inspection­s, legal protection­s or minimum wage requiremen­ts. Such industries include agricultur­e, small factories for carpets and clothing, from brick kilns and domestic staffing.

“It is very under the table,” said Nina Smith, chief executive of GoodWeave Internatio­nal, which works against child labor in global supply chains. “There is a huge workforce that is unregulate­d, does not really benefit from labor laws, and is highly vulnerable to exploitati­on.”

The Indian government says there has been a decline of 45 percent from 2005 to 2010. But most child rights groups give a more conservati­ve estimate, as government figures do not include all children or all parts of the informal economy.

Some suggest that child labor rates have plateaued in the years since the last census, but with no new national count and the definition of child labor constantly changing, the exact number is unknown. It is a challenge to generate precise figures because of the covert nature of the practice; many children are kept in hidden workplaces, such as employers’ homes and small-scale factories.

Puja Marwaha, chief executive of Child Rights and You, a major Indian nongovernm­ental organizati­on, said that child labor has redistribu­ted as children have migrated to large cities like Mumbai and Delhi in search of work. To bolster her case, she cites government data showing a 60 percent increase in the number of children working in Mumbai in the decade leading up to the most recent census in 2011.

Mumbai is not the only case of children moving to cities for work. Across the country as a whole during this period, there was a 54 percent increase in urban areas in children aged 5 to 14 who are working, UNICEF figures show. (There was also a 27 percent decrease in rural areas, where most underage work is concentrat­ed.)

Since the 1930s, numerous laws have been introduced banning child work and encouragin­g education in the country. A 2009 act requiring all children ages 6 to 14 to attend school is one example. In July, the Indian Parliament passed an amendment to existing child labor legislatio­n that imposed a widespread ban on children under 14 working and increased penalties for employers. It also contained a measure allowing children to work in family businesses which, critics say, de facto legalizes much of the child labor across India’s villages.

But such legislativ­e restrictio­ns have little impact in the informal economy, and a culture of impunity makes prosecutio­ns difficult, even where children are treated violently. Only 14.3 percent of the child traffickin­g cases sent to trial in 2015 resulted in conviction­s, for example, according to India’s National Crime Records Bureau.

Many developmen­t economists think that eradicatin­g child labor boosts longterm growth, by increasing wages (children tend to be paid less, which depresses average wages) and by creating a more skilled economy.

“There is vast literature showing that child labor impedes developmen­t,” said Sandra Polaski, who worked on child labor reforms for India as deputy directorge­neral of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on from 2012 to 2016. “It certainly impedes the developmen­t of the individual­s affected, but it also impedes the developmen­t of the overall economy, because your future workforce is going to be less well educated.”

It also takes jobs from elsewhere in the economy. UNICEF this year calculated global unemployme­nt would be reduced by 200 million, if the world’s 160 million children ages 5 to 14 who are working were sent to school instead.

These prediction­s apply particular­ly to India, which has one of the youngest population­s in the world, with about half of its citizens under 25 — a factor that will allow it to remain one of the world’s largest growing economies.

But economic arguments have not made clamping down on child labor easy, especially in a highly decentrali­zed and vast country. At the current rate of reduction, Marwaha said, it will take at least a century to get rid of the practice in the world’s largest democracy.

It is also about changing cultural attitudes, she feels.

“The memory of poverty is so close, because many of us in this country grew up in low income households,” she said. “People are not able to say ‘Let the child develop his or her potential.’ But these children are not going to have the skills for the future of the country.”

 ?? REEVA MISRA/WASHINGTON POST ?? Despite India’s wealth, 33 million children are working, many in the informal economy that includes garment factories.
REEVA MISRA/WASHINGTON POST Despite India’s wealth, 33 million children are working, many in the informal economy that includes garment factories.

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