Montreal Gazette

2.3 million people respond to posting for 368 jobs in India

Low-level opening draws candidates with doctorates, advanced degrees

- BISWAJEET BANERJEE

LUCKNOW, INDIA When a northern Indian state announced a few hundred job openings for low-level office workers who run errands and make tea, the response was staggering.

About 2.3 million people applied for the 368 jobs with the government of Uttar Pradesh. Hundreds of candidates with doctorates and other advanced degrees applied for the jobs that pay about 16,000 rupees ($240 US) a month and require a fifth-grade education.

The massive number seeking the menial jobs reflects high unemployme­nt levels in the state — India’s most populous — and across much of the country.

Senior administra­tive officer Prabhat Mittal said Friday that the state government will conduct a written exam to screen the applicants because interviewi­ng all of them would take four years.

“This is astounding­ly high number of applicants,” senior government officer Alok Ranjan said.

“This reflects the condition of job market in India and shows desperatio­n of the youth who despite being highly educated is ready to do a job where he has to run errands and wash tea cups and saucers,” he added.

The jobs openings were advertised in August and the applicatio­n period ended on Sept. 14.

At least 255 applicants had earned a doctorate and over 200,000 had graduate degrees. At least 30 trained computer engineers were also in the fray.

Job creation is an urgent requiremen­t in this nation of 1.2 billion where 13 million young people enter the job market each year.

According to government data about 6.6 per cent of India’s workers

are jobless.

That doesn’t count the tens of millions who eke out a subsistenc­elevel existence in menial, unsafe and back-breaking jobs. The employment situation is worse for young jobseekers with government statistics placing the number of unemployed higher at about 10.5 per cent.

The poor quality of education in India is partly to blame for the problem.

Millions of job seekers have impressive sounding diplomas but don’t actually have the skills promised by their certificat­es from substandar­d colleges and technical institutes.

 ?? RAJESH KUMAR SINGH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Unemployed people crowd outside the Employment Exchange Office in Allahabad in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
RAJESH KUMAR SINGH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Unemployed people crowd outside the Employment Exchange Office in Allahabad in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada