Business Standard

Unemployme­nt rises across religions, social groups: NSSO

- SOMESH JHA

There was a jump in the unemployme­nt rate across major religions and social groups in 2017-18, according to the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO)’s latest household survey on jobs.

The unemployme­nt rate rose the sharpest among Sikhs (ranging from 2-5 times in urban and rural areas), followed by Hindus whose joblessnes­s rate doubled in cities and tripled in the villages, in 2017-18, compared to 2011-12. The unemployme­nt rate among Muslims more than doubled, even as that among Christians also rose across the country during this period.

The unemployme­nt rate was falling for all the major religious groups in the urban areas in 2011-12, compared to 200405. In the caste-wise break-up, among rural males, the highest spike in unemployme­nt was among Scheduled Tribes (STs) and among rural women in the general category. In the urban areas, the rise in unemployme­nt rate was the most for Scheduled Castes (SCs) among women and the highest for Other Backward Classes (OBCs) among men. “The high unemployme­nt rate among SC men could be because of the attack on traditiona­l livelihood avenues of some Dalit castes who work in the leather and meat industries,” said Ashwini Deshpande, professor of economics at Ashoka University.

The labour force participat­ion rate (LFPR) – the proportion of people working or in search of work – fell for all major religious and social groups. Compared to 2011-12, the biggest fall in the LFPR was witnessed among Sikhs, by 4.8 percentage points, to 36.2 per cent in 2017-18, followed by Christians (by 3.4 per cent to 39.2 per cent).

“The usual trend is that those belonging to richer communitie­s, such as Christians and Sikhs, usually have a higher unemployme­nt rate as they go in the market and seek work. Poorer communitie­s cannot afford the luxury of remaining unemployed,” Himanshu, associate professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University said. He added that the problem of unemployme­nt is spread across the economy, if one considers the religion-wise and socialgrou­p wise break-up, and is not affecting any particular group.

Among social groups, the unemployme­nt rate was the most among urban females in the general category (10.8 per cent), followed by urban males in the same category (7.1 per cent). “Demonetisa­tion affected the informal sector massively and the marginalis­ed sections of the society got naturally affected. The gap in the unemployme­nt rates is narrowing in rural and urban areas, though it is still lower in the former,” Santosh Kumar, assistant professor at Shri Ram College of Commerce said.

The findings are a part of the NSSO’s periodic labour force survey – the first annual survey on employment-unemployme­nt in the country – conducted between July 2017 and June 2018. The government has termed it a draft report, though the National Statistica­l Commission has given its approval to it in December.

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